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September 28, 2020 published at 5:37 AM By nikki de guzman
Kennedy News and Media and Amanda Morgan
Keeping babies off social media can be difficult for some parents, especially when it’s through online networking platforms where they stay in touch with family and friends. While as for most of us, adding hashtags on our social media posts is just another thing that we do online.
However, for one mum, a seemingly harmless action got her horrified and losing sleep for weeks when she found out that her baby daughters pictures ended up on a child pornography website.
This is another sobering reminder for parents on keeping babies off social media and the dangers of posting their children’s photos online.
Just like most people on social media, Amanda Morgan was posting her then 6-month-old baby daughter’s pictures to share them with families and close friends. That all changed when she found out that the photos “fell into the wrong hands.”
From what she called “innocent” Facebook and Instagram pages, Amanda later learned that her daughter’s pictures were being used on websites featuring paedophile content. She learned this from fellow parents who were trying to get the site closed down.
“I cried uncontrollably for 45 minutes when I received that message. My partner couldn’t calm me down; I was sobbing and shaking. I thought it was all my fault because I had this Instagram page,” said the 29-year-old mum. She also said there were three pictures of her child on the website. They were digitally enhanced and manipulated to look like her baby had make-up.
“I haven’t dolled her up like that, I wouldn’t want to put my baby in make-up,” Morgan added.
Determined to get her child’s pictures off the site, Amanda set up an account for the website to see which images were being used. She said the website had “child abuse images all over [it].”
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” the mother wrote. “I didn’t want to look too deep because I didn’t want to scar myself. Obviously, mine’s bad with the comments, but my baby’s fully dressed. These kids are getting abused and getting pictures taken of them by their own parents. I just feel so sick, and I feel sad for those babies.”
Morgan said comments on her child’s pictures were disturbing enough, but those on other children’s pictures were far worse.
“As sickening as the comments were on [daughter’s pictures], they were mild. The other stuff that’s on there is even worse. I nearly threw up. I was literally retching like I was going to be sick. I’ve not been sleeping properly since I found out,” said Morgan.
According to Morgan, her first instinct was to blame herself for what happened, having been the person who posted her child’s pictures online.
“When I got this message I thought ‘I shouldn’t have put any pictures on’ but then I thought ‘why shouldn’t I?’ said Morgan.
“They make me happy; I love looking back on pictures from when she was little. I shouldn’t have that tarnished because of sickos in the world.” Morgan added.
But if there is anything Morgan learned from the experience, she said it’s to be careful of what we post online — and to think twice before posting pictures of children online.
“My child is covered, she’s wearing a long-sleeved jumper and a skirt in one of the pictures, and you can’t see any of her skin,” Morgan noted.
She also urged parents to make sure their children are “covered up in any pictures they share, never naked or in the bath.”
“If you want to take those pictures, just keep them to yourself, don’t put them anywhere for these creeps to get hold of,” she added.
You’ve probably heard about “sharenting.” It starts from the sonogram, their first teeth, then their grinning faces after making a mess with their first ice cream… the list, goes on.
Documenting every precious moment of their children’s lives has become part of thousands of parents’ routine. And understandably.
But because this seemingly harmless act is not always harmless, parents need to remember the three big no-nos for online safety and for keeping babies off social media:
These are not to say to don’t share anything at all or be off social media altogether. At the end of the day, sharing your baby’s pictures on social media is your choice. You just have to weigh the risks and benefits and ensure to be mindful whenever you do so.
This article was first published in theAsianparent .


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More stories to check out before you go
A HEART-BREAKING new photo series focuses on the children born from sex tourism in the Philippines.
IN ANGELES CITY, 80 kilometres north of Manila, a generation of children are growing up with no idea who their father is.
These children are the focus of a heart-breaking new photo series titled Dad is Gone.
Photographers Stephanie Borcard and Nicolas Metraux spent time in Angeles City in 2014, taking pictures of the children born from sex tourism. This particular area of the Philippines is known for its red-light district. Until 1991, the city was the home of Clark Air base, the largest US Air Base outside the United States of America. This saw an influx of brothels and “girlie bars” in the area, turning the city into one of the most popular sex tourism destinations.
Today, about 12,000 women are working in the bars that flank Fields Avenue.
Unlike in Thailand, international customers in the Philippines tend to seek a “girlfriend experience” that can last for several weeks or months.
Each year, thousands of children are born from these paid relationships. The fathers, whether American, Australian, British, German, Swiss, Korean or Japanese often abandon their offspring. In this very Catholic country, abortion is considered as a crime and punished by law.
Left behind, these children grow up in search of their own identity, where the father figure is still a question mark ...
A large number of girls who come to Angeles tend to be provincial, especially from Samar, Leyte and Visayas, having seen their friends live a “better life” because of their job in the prostitution industry. Other young females turn to prostitution after they become single unwed mothers — condoms are rarely used in the Philippines because of a strong Catholic Church opposing it.
Prostitution in the Philippines is illegal — penalties range up to life imprisonment for those involved in trafficking. Despite this, in 2013 it was estimated that there were up to 500,000 (majority female) prostitutes in the Philippines.
In her “Anti-Prostitution Act”, Senator Pia S. Cayetano claimed that the total number of people involved in prostitution in the Philippines could actually be as high as 800,000.
A Brisbane woman was outraged after receiving a letter with an “ethnic slur” on it – but not all was what it seemed.
The UK justice system has been reformed after a rape case was wrongly thrown out when experts claimed the victim had a rare sleep disorder.
Human remains thought to be those of missing Leah Croucher were found in a home once occupied by a convicted sex offender, according to police.

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