The term "excessive sharing of children's content on social media" is used to refer to what parents post on all digital platforms, including applications, smartphones, iPads, smart watches, digital assistants and others.

"Participation" includes the methods parents (as well as grandparents, teachers and other adults) use to transmit, store and use children's data via digital technologies.

Peter Pan is a real boy
Writer Leah Blanket published an article in the American magazine "Fast Company" as a legal professor and part of the youth and media team at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, she spent years studying the ways in which parents use digital technology affects children.

The author cited the example of Peter Pan, an unreal boy who would face vague moments in his life if his parents published all the details of his life.

She indicated that the moments of pregnancy and its stages can be tracked by applying fertility. In addition, his mother can post ultrasound and labor and birth video on her private accounts on social media, as well as his full name, date of birth, time, location and many more details.

Tracking our children with applications connected to a database on the Internet facilitate their information access to data brokers (communication sites)

It also tracks his early education period through applications and smart games connected to a database on the Internet. His parents will likely register him with a summer camp through an online portal that requires them to use facial recognition software.

And when his parents decide that he has reached the appropriate age to ride his bike himself, they may give him a smart watch that allows him to send messages if he needs help, and allows them to track his location. His personal information, from online surveys, will make its way to data brokers.

Later, Peter's request to enter a university can be processed through a personal capital balance program that uses pregnancy and teenage data to anticipate his chances of success in classes, curricula, and future work.

The law allows parents to share their children's private data unless it violates the criminal law or any other law (Bixaby)

Protecting children's privacy
There are digital products based on available data that claim to predict the success of child athletes along the lines of the social credit system adopted by China, where high schools and institutions of higher education use a range of digital services to predict and enhance student success through tracking attendance and other measures.

Parents sharing content related to their children is legal in the United States of America, as there is no federal law that provides comprehensive protection of the privacy of young people's data. The law also allows parents to share their children's private data, unless this violates the criminal law or any other law.

The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act does not provide comprehensive protection for children's privacy on the Internet because it does not apply when parents share personal information about their children, but rather when children under the age of 13 share personal information about themselves.

Parents can post their children's swimwear videos on YouTube and share information (such as age and residence) on their communication sites. But these legal parental practices put children at risk of physical harm (for example from an aggressor in real life) and financial harm (such as identity theft and credit card fraud).

Losing control over the special details in our children's lives exposes them to potential embarrassment when they grow up. This is because we contribute to shaping the reputation of our children by spreading their personal information, and we also contribute to giving people who might want to harm them the opportunity.

We limit our children's abilities to build their personalities and get to know others by providing an enormous amount of information that can be collected, analyzed and disposed of by schools, employers and other institutions, both today and in the future.

To help the digital world forget about the photos you have posted, clean your accounts at least annually (German)

How do we protect our children's data from pirates?
We cannot review all our privacy policies on various digital platforms, but we can review our relationship with technology by thinking about our values. Here's how values ​​can be adopted to make more daily technical options to protect children's privacy:

The right to play
Your children need a protected space to experiment, get hurt, and make mistakes that help them learn many lessons. As your children roam around you, resist the urge to download their videos to YouTube.

The right to forget
Your children go through a stage in life that may embarrass them later, but they desperately need this space to learn from. To enable them "the right to forget" think about what you can do to help the digital world forget about those photos and clips you posted on social media. And you can clean your accounts at least annually.

The right to communicate
When we resort to using artificial intelligence to take care of our children or applications to keep tabs on them, we go beyond the stage of human interactions towards digital interactions. We give digital tools large amounts of sensitive data.

When we focus on promoting direct human contact with our children rather than digital communication, we contribute to deepening the relationships we have with them and protecting their individual privacy. Therefore, parents should avoid replacing human interactions with mechanical reactions when it comes to young children, and avoid monitoring children's movements with monitoring devices.

The right to respect
When we share our children's photos on social platforms we pay for free or low cost digital technology through our children's data. But we can make a better deal on their behalf that helps us protect their data.

And we can try to buy goods that really protect their privacy, even if we have to pay more in dollars. Realizing that this option is not available to many financially, we can all claim to sell technology that helps protect privacy at an affordable price.