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by randallu
4664 days ago
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I agree with you, but I suppose the point is to make it the child's decision to share or not when they become mature enough to make that choice. (Personally my wife and I have no information on our kids online, save a self-hosted blog with a password that only family know...). |
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But the article isn't about privacy conscientiousness, it's about brand conscientiousness.
The author isn't talking about how she might construct rules to effect a safe space for her daughter to grow and learn and internalize these values, separate from known pitfalls that might cause her harm.
The author talks only about how she constructed a safe space for her daughter's brand, separate from whatever might befall her daughter while she's maturing.
It's might seem like a minor distinction, but it doesn't feel that way to me. It makes the whole article feel essentially disingenuous.