Teens, Privacy, and Online Social Network Sites

Parents Need Understand the World of Internet Friendship

© Alex Sharp

Oct 31, 2008
Social Network Sites are Popular with Teens, Bombardier (Flickr Creative Commons License)
Teens used to access social networking sites after school, and parents could monitor internet usage. Now teens can access the sites without parental awareness.

Since teenagers can access the sites at home, on a mobile phone, with a laptop and wifi, at a friend's house, the public library, and in some cases, school, it is almost impossible to prevent a teenager from participating in a social networking site. It is better for parents to accept that online friendships and connections exist, and arm themselves with knowledge.

Understanding Social Networks

Social Networks are internet junk food - they are fun, cute, and offer limited substance. Social networks offer people individual pages that can be personalized. Users must create an account, a profile, and a page they can personalize. Most people use social networks to show off pictures and post information about themselves. Users can add friends, which will allow more access to private posts. Users can also post comments that can be seen by other people.

Dangers of Social Networking Sites

The primary concern with social networking sites is that people will unwittingly invite threats into their lives by revealing too much personal information. Because people comment on eachother's pages, posting in the comment section of one friend's page can allow a stalker to find out details that most people consider fairly private, such as school schedules and phone numbers.

An increasing problem with social networking sites is that the past will haunt the poster. Future employers and college admissions personnel can research the sites and discover an immature, wild side of a teenager.

Comparing Social Networking Services

Although all the social network sites have the same basic structure, they offer different levels of privacy protection.

  • Bebo offers three levels of privacy. Users under the age of 16 years are automatically private. Bebo lets users adjust for privacy, including setting restrictions of the age and school of the viewer. Of course, there is no way for Bebo to verify that a user is actually that age or attends that school.
  • Facebook offers two levels of privacy, and users can choose which friends get updates about themselves. Facebook allows users to join regions, which can be changed a limited number of times.
  • Habbo is site that is specifically designed for teenagers. It is designed to be more private that other sites, and has more moderation than other sites. They filter pages for private information and have an easy to access parent help page. Like other social networking sites, friends can be added and removed.
  • Myspace allows two privacy options. If a user is friends with one someone, they can see and comment on that person's pictures and site. Myspace has increased privacy and warnings for users.
  • Myyearbook has two privacy options. Users are grouped by school and location.and the site allows users to transfer their myspace pages to a more teen-friendly site.
  • Twitter allows constant conversation through text messages. Users can restrict who their texts go to, and have privacy by determining who their friends are, but the site defaults to allowing everyone to read everyone's communication.
  • Xanga has changed over the years, and has the most refined privacy options. Users can block people who can view their pages and restrict who can comment on pages. Xanga allows people to "lock out" anyone who is not approved.

Protecting Privacy Online

In order to protect private information, it is important that teenagers do not post personal information about themselves, and that they insist friends respect their privacy by not posting information. Teenagers should never post these things on other sites, and if they post them on their own sites, they need to keep the page private.

  • last names
  • addresses
  • phone numbers
  • school details (schedules, names of teachers, coaches, or anything that can be researched to determine what school is being discussed)
  • yearbook scans
  • detailed travel plans
  • detailed social plans

Even though sites offer privacy, it does not mean that they guarantee privacy. Internet predators are clever and dangerous. Teenagers should only become virtual friends with people they know in real life. Social network sites are great for keeping in touch with far-away friends, but those friends should be confirmed to exist in reality.


The copyright of the article Teens, Privacy, and Online Social Network Sites in Teen Culture is owned by Alex Sharp. Permission to republish Teens, Privacy, and Online Social Network Sites in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Social Network Sites are Popular with Teens, Bombardier (Flickr Creative Commons License)
Teens Can Access the Internet at the Library, San Jose Library (Flickr Creative Commons License)
The Iphone Has a Facebook App, Ibuffet (Flickr Creative Commons License)
Technoloy Fits Seemlessly into Teen LIfe, Uberculture (Flickr Creative Commons License)
Social Network Sites Connect People, Luc Legay (Flickr Creative Commons License)


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Comments
Dec 11, 2008 9:42 AM
Guest :
this web sight is go handy and it tells the truth about goths and emos god i wish i could help stop stareotipes do you??????????????
Jul 6, 2009 6:20 PM
Guest :
I don't get it... in the Twitter info it says:
"Users can restrict who their texts go to"
but then it also says:
"but the site defaults to allowing EVERYONE to read everyone's communication"
EHICH ONE IS IT?????


2 Comments