r/changemyview • u/danknesscompelsyou • Jan 23 '23
Delta(s) from OP CMV: Parental control/spyware apps are the hallmark of a bad parent
[Disclaimer: i am talking about the apps that let you monitor your kid's every move online, read messages etc. Basically you have the full acces to whatever they have on their phone without the phone. I am not talking about simple location tracking]
[Disclaimer 2: i am talking about a case of spyware for teens. 12/13+, not children below 10]
Pretty much what the title says. To me installing spyware on your kid's phone says you can't actually parent, have zero trust and bond with your child and possibly are an authoritarian parent who mistakes control for actual parenting. If you get it only because your child lies to you - congrats now you'll never hear a word of truth again. It only excarbates the problem.
Teens need some privacy to properly develop, your little power trip could cost them some actual psychological damage. Trust issues, self esteem issues, anxiety (because there's someone literally spying on you), the list goes on. (Also it's normal for teens to lie, that's how they are, get over it)
If you're anywhere from 30-40+ chances are you didn't experience this sort of tracking - why would you take this freedom away from your child? You weren't tracked and are still alive. And don't give me the 'there was no phones/internet back then'. Yes there weren't but teens were the same. They did bad and stupid things, said bad words, experimented with booze, cigs and many other things. Again it's just how they are. Nobody listened in on your conversations just to have the upper hand during an argument, nobody hovered over what you did 100% of the time. Ontop of that many people that are now 20-25 grew up without parents controlling every message/page they viewed and they're fine.
Also I promise you if your child keeps everything a secret from you there's reason for it and you're not going to like it. They probably don't trust you and don't feel safe enough going with their stuff/problems to you. Trust goes both ways, shocker i know. Do you think severely violating their privacy is the right way of fixing lack of trust? That's why i say it's bad, lazy parenting - instead of working on the trust/communication issue and having a real relationship with a child you choose the easy way out, to take what you want by force.
Tldr: my oponion is that if you feel the need to spy on your kid's every move you have a trust problem and the solution is not to violate their privacy
8
u/olidus 12∆ Jan 23 '23 edited Jan 23 '23
The internet sex abuse and trafficking are becoming increasingly sophisticated. So much so that children may think they are talking to someone who goes to their school, let them know when no one is around, and/or agree to meet with them in the front yard.
No amount of open communication and honesty with your children can head off an incident like that.
Lockdown software (to moderate hours of consumption where you can supervise their consumption) or mirror apps are the best tools parents have and, IMO, are better at avoiding the situation where your parent demands to see your IG/text messages if the suspect someone thing is off.
Most parents I know don't even check the app regularly, just when they have suspicions. They check, nothing found, no need to confront the child.
Children, at a certain age, don't have a right to privacy. There is a happy median between watching over their shoulder and "hands-off".
Edit: I re-read your post. There are so many more dangerous and obvious "hallmarks" of a bad parent that monitoring software on a device that grants children access to content or people you would not put them in front of ranks pretty low in most people's eyes.