CleoTheWizard,

I actually think these apps are perfectly fine, I just think that you should have to request the location from the phone and then that request also alerts the kid.

I’ll paint a different picture for parents in this thread. Gen Z does not have adequate social spaces in which to exist. So when you say “hey I’m going to track you” it’s like oh cool, track me going where exactly? To basketball practice and back? Or to the mall so you can know which store I’m in?

Parents are gaining more and more control over their kids and I don’t think it’s good. They aren’t independent people. As a kid I hated having zero autonomy, it sucked. So all this is achieving is making kids feel like it’s less hassle to just stay at home and play video games.

HobbitFoot,

Yeah. I feel like there has been this loss where teenagers can self form communities in the name of safety.

You have to ease in kids to being in control of themselves rather than dumping it all at once.

BearOfaTime,

My problem with these apps is twofold:

Primarily it means these companies know where your kids are, and they are building a dB of locations and other info of the kid (likely including online activity via other ops on the phone, etc), starting tracking early.

Second, it’s a poor way to manage trust between parents and kids. I refuse to use it, and refuse to help anyone I know use it, and explain to them why.

If you don’t trust your kids, then work on resolving that issue. And before anyone says “I trust my kids but not other people”, well, you gonna go everywhere with them to protect them from other people, or teach them how to navigate life, and learn to develop their own independent judgement?

There are self-hostable tracking systems. One is in my queue to setup for family/friends. It’ll be configured so anyone in a circle can use it, but these people trust each other. We intend it for arrival/departure notifications more than anything.

Whelks_chance,

In this thread: people not understanding sampling bias. Of course everyone here likes privacy, and had friends who think similarly. It’s a privacy themed community on a niche tech forum.

neurospice,

Conversely, the sampling done in the GenZ survey was by the tracking company (who you can probably wager have a bias towards anti-privacy…)

neurospice,

Article reads as propaganda. No way that zoomers are into this. This just sounds like justification for abusive parents to spy on their children. As a GenZ, I don’t recall having a single friend with this kind of arrangement with their parents, but then again I mostly hung around the more questionable crowd where you actually needed privacy. Would really hope we stop bickering among generations and actually fight for privacy together

Umbrias,

While more on the parent side of the age gap of things now, I know at least five offspring personally who do this willingly. It is a nightmare to me, moreso the fact that it’s basically impossible or was the last time I looked to find ways to do it that are foss.

But the point is, probably more people do it than you expect. This place is a selection bias, most people genuinely give no rats ass about their privacy, and, to the shock of many, trust their parents and like the safety net.

There are certainly secure privacy focused approaches they retain the agency of both parties which could exist. It’s a very real niche.

duncesplayed,

Article reads as propaganda

More like advertising. I’d put down a pretty big bet that Life360 sponsored this article and probably wrote a fair chunk of the copy, too.

SinAdjetivos,

Advertising is just propaganda where the politick is centered around consumerism.

However, even if you consider that “not a real politic” this article skips past the consumerism and straight into police state normalization.

sigmaklimgrindset,

For real, how are Millennials falling for the same headlines that were used to spread stupid assumptions about their own generation a decade ago, but this time about Gen Z?

Contrast to you, I hang out with a pretty straight laced crowd, and we also don’t “track each other on Snapchat” like the article or the top comment here is saying because that’s fucking weird.

What’s gonna be the Gen Z avocado toast headline, I wonder…

cheese_greater,

Media literacy classes should be compulsory and deal with all this crap. Its pretty irresponsible as a society that we leave so much to people to figure it all out or be so vulnerable to exploitation and scams. So damn preventable and beneficial when people can help self-curate out the bullshit but echo chambers are also always gonna echo chamber, so there’s that too

Cracks_InTheWalls, (edited )
@Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works avatar

So I live with a member of Gen Z, and it must vary from group to group, but the kids I come into contact with are always able to see exactly where their friends are, including randoms they briefly interacted with on Snapchat once.

I agree that It’s fucking weird. Location sharing on an adhoc basis to coordinate meetups makes sense, but they seem to have this open and broadcasting literally all of the time.

I also get a lot of chuffing and “You’re being ridiculous” when I try to point out how fucking insane, unsafe and dystopian that is.

nonfuinoncuro,

I dunno, I still have location sharing on 24/7 with my millennial buddies from 10-15 years ago when we were partying hard and it was annoying to keep texting or calling to find out which bar or club you were at or moved on to. Especially when you black out and stop responding.

wizardbeard,
@wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Just because a headline was published doesn’t mean people agree with it. You can literally publish whatever the fuck you want as long as you don’t cross a threshold that your core reader base stops trusting the publication. Fluff pieces like this are primetime space for just going off on bullshit with minimal repurcussions.

Beyond that clickbait/ragebait are absolutely a thing, and so is manufactured consent style propaganda.

Life360 just needs to have this article published in enough places that it seems like a ton of people are saying it. Gets the ball rolling for the appearance of people sharing this opinion when the reality is that they just got a dozen news sites to reword their press packet.

sigmaklimgrindset,

Sorry, I should have specified “in this comment section”. You’re absolutely right about everything you said regarding the online news circlejerk when it comes to “perceptions”.

There’s just a lot of anti-gen Z comments in this thread that make it seem like we don’t care about privacy issues or tech literacy, when a lot of us do, or we’re JUST learning about the importance of this stuff because the first of our generation are finally gaining independence and footing in society.

stepanzak,

My parents could try to convince me to download shit like this.

cheese_greater,

To be a fly on the wall for tha—whoops 👻

stepanzak,

Sorry, English isn’t my first language and I’m not entirely sure what do you mean by that.

cheese_greater,

So fly-on-the-wall refers to someone in the room who silently observes what is happening and said between whoever else is in the room—usually covertly so they are hidden and unnoticed.

So when I expressed the humorous wish to be there to watch your convo with the parents, I’m ironically ignoring the fact this entire thread is about spying and intrusive/unwanted surveillance.

Hope that helps!

stepanzak,

I get it now. Thanks for the explanation!

TheInsane42,
@TheInsane42@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, everybody with a phone can be followed… unless the leave the phone at home, forgeg toncharge it, …

For every high-tech problem there is a low-tech solution.

Franzia,

OP this post is just outrage bait. Business insider? Really?

MadBob,

Business Insider? Hardly knew 'er.

whale,
@whale@lemm.ee avatar

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • DragonTypeWyvern,

    I say let them cook.

    We’ve had twenty years of bullshit Gen X-written Millennials vs Boomers, it’s past time Gen Z gets some attention.

    AceFuzzLord,

    I know it’s just some rag bait nonsense, but I know as a fact most teens would never want their parents to constantly know where they are and monitor them constantly.

    Gruntyfish,

    The rest of Gen Z can speak for themselves.

    CmdrShepard,

    I think if anyone is qualified to speak for Gen Z, it’s most certainly Business Insider.

    super_user_do,
    @super_user_do@feddit.it avatar

    I’m a gen zer and I would absolutely freak out. I’d rather not going out rather than being spied 24/7 by my parents. Seriously, this is the best way to kill trust between children and their parents. Now even the social relationship between parents and children has to be extremely toxic and anxiogenic as a basic minimum requirement

    cheese_greater, (edited )

    That cant be real—holy shit. Thats worse than picking on kids that dont have an iPhone™️ or any phone or don’t have “the blue bubbles” from using iMessage (which nobody should ever use honestly)

    derpgon,

    Fight the system, if someone laughs at you for having a green bubble, just counter by saying you are special and they are just normies like everyone else with blue bubble.

    cheese_greater, (edited )

    I go even further and say “if you want the real and sick blue bubbles, get Signal”.

    Otherwise, enjoy getting spied on and having all your data handed over from Apple and also iMessage is dogshit. Half the time it doesnt even get delivered/received and you have to literally call or message the person through some real stable means of communication to troubleshoot

    Imma not even get started on iMessage --> skeleton key/zero-day purpose (this is conjecture but I vehemently reject any argument to the contrary)

    derpgon,

    Yeah, those people are delusional, but that’s what you get when you raise kids in a world where having expensive shit is more important than teaching them frugality, money saving, and being nice to each other.

    Blue bubbles go brrrr, doesn’t matter the kid doesn’t have attention span due to watching TikTok all day, or eating junk food cuz parents order fast food and have frozen pizza every day for dinner.

    cheese_greater, (edited )

    …expensive shit…eating junk food…fast food…frozen pizza…

    You’re hitting dangerously close to home here, lol

    derpgon,

    I mean, I do it because I want to, not because I have to.

    Okay, sometimes I am just lazy and not doing it might make me regret it later on.

    cheese_greater,

    do it

    Err—could you clarify what you mean?

    derpgon,

    Burying bodies in my garden eating shitty food in order to sate my hunger for human flesh which usually makes me go on a killing spree to calm my cravings for blood less productive.

    Stumblinbear,
    @Stumblinbear@pawb.social avatar

    See the thing is I’m fine with it because I know my parents wouldn’t have spied on me 24/7. If they were helicopter parents and DID check where I was every hour of the day I wouldn’t be fine with it.

    super_user_do,
    @super_user_do@feddit.it avatar

    My parents have always been VERY restrictive about anything but computers (just because they don’t understand them). However, I asked them if they would do it and they told me that’s damn outrageous

    0as16,

    There are more secure location sharing apps out there that are end to end encrypted. My family uses Zood location www.zood.xyz when we are out and about and needing to coordinate our locations. It is handy to use sometimes but it doesn’t do all the spy stuff the other apps do.

    derpgon,

    I self-host Hauk, although I could not polish all the bugs myself, it works pretty well.

    We have location sharing on 24/7, it was consensual on both sides, and it is great when coordinating.

    I am 27, tho, back in my teenager days there was no location tracking easily available, but I’d use it in a heartbeat. Better than getting asked if I am already on the way home or still at the party.

    cheese_greater,

    I mean, just carrying a cellphone with mobile reception is almost like a 24/7 GPS tracker although obv no parent is generally going to be able to (not should they be able to) like warrant or subpoena that shit from the network carriers/towers

    shani66,
    @shani66@burggit.moe avatar

    Scariest visual novel i ever played was about kids having their privacy personally violated (that is, not generic analytic data, but someone knowing that kid specifically was doing so and so) and just not caring about it.

    LastoftheDinosaurs,
    @LastoftheDinosaurs@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • duncesplayed,

    Not quite. By the most common definitions, they’re born between 1997 and 2012, so 10-26.

    FeelzGoodMan420,

    Business Insider is straight AIDS

    cheese_greater,

    Hey, thats not very nice to AIDS, at least AIDS might be cureable someday and isn’t—I dunno, like—BusinessInsider.

    SuperSpruce,

    I am Gen Z and I’m not fine with that. I chose to go to college far from where I grew up so that I would be independent and free and do stuff on my own accord, like buying a motorcycle.

    Amazed,

    Are Gen Z pro organ donation?

    pedro,

    Is that an argument against motorcycles?

    Amazed,

    Is what?

    pedro,

    What?

    SuperSpruce,

    I have an organ donor on my license. But I’m not trying to kill myself, I’m just following my heart.

    It seems like fewer people in my generation have motorcycles because 1) we have less money (although you can save by replacing a car with one) than previous generations, and 2) the older generations constantly push the narrative that having a motorcycle is equivalent to having a death wish, which circles back to the point that they shouldn’t be spying on us all the time.

    Jax,

    You’re taking a line and putting it on the road against planes.

    Follow your heart all you want, my math teacher in high-school had a motorcycle. Broke his collar bone, fractured his skull, broke his leg and had road rash. Much like smoking cigarettes, you’re allowed to take your life into your own hands. Don’t convince yourself that you’re somehow doing otherwise.

    SuperSpruce,

    I’m being as safe as I can. I’m ATGATT and I started on a beginner bike without much power.

    Jax,

    Listen, again, you can do whatever you want.

    Do not pretend it isn’t dangerous. This behavior will be what turns you into someone like my math teacher.

    GeekyNerdyNerd,

    You sound so paranoid about safety I get the feeling you literally live in a suit of bubble-wrap. If they wanted your finger wagging they’d have asked you for it

    Jax,

    Sure buddy, you’ll never die.

    GeekyNerdyNerd,

    And you are talking like people who ride motorcycles have a 100% death toll. Which is demonstrably false.

    I don’t ride them, I’m 29 morbidly obese and have a shit sense of balance. I just can’t stand people who try to spread fear based on personal trauma they experienced instead of being factual about the real dangers of the world.

    Jax,

    Personal trauma?

    What makes you think learning from someone else’s stupid decisions qualifies as trauma? Oh, this must not be a lesson you learned growing up.

    When you see someone do something stupid you go “no, I’m ok”, and your life is better for it.

    You wanna die young, or cripple yourself? Go for it, be my guest. Don’t delude yourself into thinking it isn’t on the table because “not everyone who rides motorcycles dies”.

    Great logic there. Very big brained.

    GeekyNerdyNerd,

    What makes you think learning from someone else’s stupid decisions qualifies as trauma?

    I don’t. I think someone you care about dying in a motorcycle accident counts as personal trauma.

    When you see someone do something stupid you go “no, I’m ok”, and your life is better for it.

    See, this is what I mean. Motorcycle riding isn’t an inherently stupid thing, or at least no more stupid than driving a car or riding a bike. There is inherent danger in all forms of transportation. I don’t see you railing against the people driving two ton land torpedoes that we call “cars’ and killing people on motorcycles or those who walk.

    Don’t delude yourself into thinking it isn’t on the table because “not everyone who rides motorcycles dies”.

    The only one who suggested it.” isn’t on the table" is the strawman in your head

    This is why I said you’ve got some personal trauma. You are insisting you don’t actually care about the safety of someone who you spent time out of your day to yell at for wanting to drive a motorcycle, then call anybody who says you are being excessive childish for not agreeing that motorcycles have a 100% injury and mortality rate and that the person who you supposedly don’t care about is doomed to end up like the teacher who supposedly isn’t a source of personal trauma for you

    Edit to add: I’ll forgive your ad-homenins because it’s clear you need some therapy to overcome the death of that teacher you knew.

    Jax,

    You have brain damage. I don’t know if it’s from the obesity or something else, but I never said my teacher died.

    I said he fucked himself up. Don’t weigh in on shit you don’t understand.

    GeekyNerdyNerd,

    Ok I’m done giving you the benefit of the doubt. You are an asshole… Please kindly go fuck yourself.

    Jax,

    No the asshole is the one acting like learning from others mistakes means you live in a safety bubble.

    thanksforallthefish,

    The plural of anecdote isnt data. I’ve been riding for 45 years and I’m still here.

    Data shows the vast majority of 2 vehicle motorcycle accidents are the fault of the other vehicle

    Jax,

    Jesus christ, I don’t care what you risk your life doing.

    Claiming that, somehow, riding isn’t dangerous or risky when it’s the other drivers on the road that are at fault is fucking brain damaged.

    All it takes is one, and the rest of your life is fucked. I don’t give a shit what you decide is right for you. Genuinely.

    Resistentialism,

    There’s significantly less chance of getting fucked for life if yiu actually wear proper safety gear. Doesn’t stop the danger of others, though. But it can lower damage.

    Jax,

    That’s great, I’m glad you make these choices for yourself.

    hansl,

    The plural of anecdotes isn’t data. You not being fine with that doesn’t mean the majority aren’t.

    samus12345,
    @samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

    They never said the majority wasn’t.

    elfin8er,

    Exactly! I appreciate hearing about a different point of view.

    MasterBuilder,

    rolls D-100 … I disbelieve!

    echodot,

    I never cared that my parents knew where he was because I was never trying to do anything particularly nefarious and my parents weren’t completely buttheads.

    But this was pre mobile phone days (my first phone was a Nokia Ngage), so if I went out they wouldn’t be able to contact me in an emergency so it made sense to say oh I’m going to x house here is ther phone number. Now that mobile phones exist maybe that requirement no longer exists.

    MasterBuilder,

    That is a trust based transaction when parent asks where their child is going as well.

    Putting tracking malware and using surveillance all the time is invasion of privacy, teaching the child that surveillance is okay, and completely lacking a trust relationship, which is bad within a family.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • privacyguides@lemmy.one
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #

    Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 23862864 bytes) in /var/www/kbin/kbin/vendor/symfony/http-kernel/Profiler/FileProfilerStorage.php on line 174

    Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 6307840 bytes) in /var/www/kbin/kbin/vendor/symfony/error-handler/Resources/views/logs.html.php on line 33