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(IT-NEWSWIRE.COM, February 03, 2020 ) As cyberbullying and online harassment continue to plague today's adolescents the demand for accountability and parental monitoring software continues to increase.
Recent statistics conducted by The Harford County Examiner and the i-SAFE Foundation suggest that over 50% of teens have been bullied online and as so often the case, the very same number of teens admits to having engaged in cyberbullying themselves.
Of those 50% who have admitted to being bullied, about half of them admit thatthe bullying was reoccurring and have experienced the online harassment repeatedly.
According to i-SAFE most of those teens do not tell their parents when cyberbullying occurs and even less report such behavior to their local police.
Some suggestions for victims of cyberbullying include saving the messages as it may be useful to law enforcement if the harassment ever comes to fruition offline. While guardians of potential cyberbullying victims are encouraged to monitor their
children's online activity.
Some suggested methods for monitoring adolescents is to use a common computer, such as a shared computer for the whole family. This would allow the parents to review information sent to and from the shared PC. While these types of suggestions may
be well intended, the day of the one computer family has come and gone the same way as the one TV and one car family.
Today's teens aren't really using the computer in the same way smartphones and the social media tools used by adolescents is constantly evolving. Newer social networks and chat applications such as Snapchat make tracking abusive behavior online even more difficult as the messages disappear as soon as they are read. And others can only be read by those who were invited.
It seems bullying isn't going anywhere, it just continues to evolve. W hat once took place on the schoolyard after class, now operates in a virtual world where its victims are never safe; and where home offers no respite.
One thing that has not changed is the popularity of Apple's iPhone among teens. With the recent launch of the iPhone 11 Apple continued to strengthen their user base to over 1.5 billion devices worldwide. According to Digital Trends, up to 80% of minors use iPhones as opposed to Android, and this is the platform where online bullying is taking place.
Concerned parents however have access to new keylogging applications and parental monitoring solutions for the iPhone, and without having to endure the complicated process of jailbreaking. The Remote Keylogger Developers have recently announced that their latest iPhone keylogger can be connected directly to iCloud for completely unobtrusive monitoring.
Some of the new no jailbreak iPhone keylogging solutions include GPS tracking, WhatsApp message capture and audio recording, Tinder activity, Line Chat recording, QQ capture and even WeChat along with a full history of websites visited along with their search history.
While not a perfect solution and to many, a violation of a students privacy. Keyloggers and parental monitoring applications don't need to be intrusive. New filters allow parents to only be notified if a rule has been broken, a geographic line has been crossed, or the phone is not where it should be for that time of day.
Remote Keyloggers
Eric Nelson
650-740-3065
escrowreview@yahoo.com
Source: EmailWire.Com
Source: EmailWire.com
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