
Think Before You Share: A Parent’s Guide to Safeguarding Kids on Social Media
When my kids were young, I sent out monthly newsletters to my close friends and family updating them on some of the crazy antics and adventures we had. As a military family, we moved often, and this was a great way to stay connected. It was long before social media and our current world where life plays out on screens and sharing family moments online is second nature. If I’d had access to today’s social media, I probably would have bombarded constant kid cuteness without considering the consequences. But before you post that adorable photo of your child, it’s important to think about the potential long-term risks—to their safety, privacy, and future. As parents, protecting our children isn’t just physical and psychological—it’s also digital self-defense.

What Is Sharenting—and Why It Matters
“Sharenting” describes parents sharing photos, stories, and personal data about their children online. From birth announcements to sleepy selfies, sharenting may feel harmless—but research shows it can expose children to identity theft, digital abuse, and lasting reputational harm. Experts warn oversharing damages trust and may even influence children’s self-identity later in life. There are a several ways Cyber Creeps can target your children.
Identity Theft and Digital Kidnapping
Child identity theft isn’t just a buzzword. By 2030, it’s estimated that about two‑thirds of identity theft cases involving minors will link back to images or posts their parents shared online. A Deutsche Telekom video shows parents how easy it is to use AI to manipulate a child’s image for exploitation. Worse still, digital kidnapping cases—where strangers repost a child’s photos under fake profiles—are creeping upward. One disturbing case involved a man in China creating a whole account around other people’s kids from overseas, using their images to cultivate followers.
AI Abuse and Sexual Exploitation Risks
AI technology has amplified the risks of sharing innocent photos. These tools can transform your child’s image into disturbing sexual content—even without physical contact or direct involvement. Recent reports describe how predators use “nudifier” apps to turn photos of children into abusive imagery, a horror that many victims may not even realize occurred, Predators are increasingly targeting AI-generated child figures, using children’s images to lure others or to fantasize about with disturbing detail.

Cyberbullying and Unwanted Attention
The fallout from sharenting can also be emotional, making children the targets of cyberbullying, ridicule or stigmatization. A Reddit user shared how her infant daughter’s innocent photos led to sexualized comments like calling her “hot” or “every man’s dream,” prompting the mother to remove all her child’s online images.
Trolls and Social Services Harassment
Even sharing innocently can provoke false reports and online harassment. A UK mother documented how internet trolls reported her to child protective services for alleged abuse—simply because she shared daily moments with her babies. The guilt, fear, and emotional toll were immense, even though the case was closed without action.
Predator Solicitation Patterns in Social Media
A survey from Australia found that over 100 parents had received predatory approaches asking for sexual images of their children—often after sharing child photos publicly on social media. The more they posted, the more likely they were to be targeted for manual or automated solicitation attempts.

Future Embarrassment and Consent
Did you ever post an embarrassing photo of your child—only for them to groan or react in embarrassment years later? Many experts caution against sharing moments children may find humiliating in the future. One 18‑year‑old sued her parents for posting hundreds of personal photos without consent that affected her reputation and relationships. Another victim of sharenting—Shari Franke, daughter of a “mommy vlogger”—spoke publicly about how being filmed from childhood sacrificed her innocence and autonomy. Imagine that future job interview “Well Billy, you say you are a fast learner but we’ve seen evidence that your potty training didn’t exactly reflect that.”
Loss of Control Over Privacy
Even posts set to “private” status can be screenshotted, downloaded, and reshared. One report noted that nearly half of Facebook posts featuring children included their names, and a fifth of Instagram posts had both name and birthdate visible—little data that predators eagerly collect. Metadata embedded in photos—like GPS location—can also reveal home addresses or school locations, creating real-world risk.

Practical Steps: Digital Self‑Defense
✅ Ask Before You Post
Use these questions as your guide: Who’s going to see this post? Do I know them? Is there personal data (birth date, school, location) visible? If something makes you uneasy—don’t post.
✅ Use Privacy Settings Wisely
Set accounts to private. Limit who can see or comment on posts. But remember – screens can be captured, accounts can leak, and platforms can share metadata or images beyond your control.
✅ Avoid Posting Other Children
If photos include friends or classmates, always get permission. Avoid showing details like school names or uniforms that help identify locations.
✅ Delete Location Metadata
Turn off geotags and remove metadata from uploads. A neighborhood landmark or background can reveal your child’s school, home, or routine routes.
✅ Share Privately
Use direct messaging or photo apps like Family Album and Proton Drive to share moments with trusted friends and relatives—not publicly searchable platforms.
✅ Respect Their Autonomy
Ask older kids whether they’re comfortable with photos being posted. Teach them about digital reputations, privacy, and consent.

Crafting a Sharenting Policy: A Sample Framework
| Step | Action |
| Set a privacy date | Decide a cutoff age or date when you’ll stop posting unless children consent. |
| Content audit | Review old posts: remove sensitive or identifying details that you might regret later. |
| Teach digital literacy | Talk to your children about online presence and reputation—even young kids can begin learning. |
| Use disclaimers | Tags such as “family album (private)” can signal intent—but don’t rely solely on these. |
| Limit platform use | Choose private shared albums or closed group messaging instead of broad social media posting. |

Emotional Self‑Defense: Why Parents Should Care
Social media posts may “look safe,” but the unseen risks—identity theft, predatory AI, private data leaks—are real. Teaching digital caution is self-defense for the whole family. It protects children’s emotional well-being, preserves their trust in parents, and avoids unanticipated consequences like harassment, legal exposure, or emotional trauma.
Remember: you can’t fully erase what you post online—but you can choose to limit what stays there in the first place.
Post with Purpose
Social media can be a joyful way to share milestones. But good digital self-defense starts with control, consent, and foresight:
- Think first, post last. Protect identity over likes.
- Know your options, Understand privacy settings and metadata for the platforms you use.
- Prioritize consent, as your children grow into their own digital lives.
Our children deserve our protection—online and off. Guarding their digital footprint is just as important as teaching them to lock the car door or be aware of their surroundings. Our VORTX Child Safety classes help families learn the physical and emotional skills they need to stay safe. Safety habits that parents set in place now will help children prioritize privacy and personal protection as they grow and step into the physical and digital world themselves.
