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<blockquote data-quote="Marguerite" data-source="post: 339828" data-attributes="member: 1991"><p>Something I read about - I think it happened here in Australia, I know it's happened in the US - a kid was sending naked photos of herself to her boyfriend, the girl was about 14. The boyfriend was showing it around the place (so not very respectful of girl who rapidly decided he was ex-boyfriend) and then the boy got hauled in for trafficking in child porn, and having child porn on his phone. I don't think anything was actually done to him except giving him and his mates a thorough scare, that what they were doing constituted just that - child pornography. Because the girls they were getting to sext them, were under-age.</p><p></p><p>Various schools here have different rules on mobile phones at school. One school difficult child 3 used to go to, insisted on all phones being held at the school office all day. Kids had to sign in their phones in the morning, collect them when school finished at the end of the day, because there should have been no need for them during the day. But at the high school that difficult child 1 & easy child 2/difficult child 2 went to, the kids had phones on them all the time AND used them in class. easy child 2/difficult child 2's first boyfriend was a kid on the other side of the classroom who texted her during class, asked her to go with him via txt. Just about all communication between them was via text. She never actually got to go OUT anywhere with him; one time they were supposed to meet up at the beach, I just happened to be driving easy child 2/difficult child 2 there (he didn't know that) and when she texted him to find out why he wasn't there, he texted back that he and his mates had got together and were smoking pot and drinking; he was now too high to go anywhere. Nice.</p><p>So she tried to ring him so she could talk about this, over the next week. She kept leaving messages to talk to him, kept trying to ring when he would be at home - and he was (allegedly) never home. So she broke up with him - via text. As I said to her at the time - "Can you pronounce 'LOSER'?"</p><p></p><p>Breaking up via text is very bad form. But when you have no other option...</p><p></p><p>I do think that teachers should be able to search kids' phones for inappropriate pics, AND take action. I think it would stop a lot of unpleasantness and inappropriate behaviour. Similarly, with computers. Underage girls sending inappropriate pics of themselves via email are causing trouble not only for themselves but for the boys on the receiving end. Also possibly their parents, whose computers the stuff often lands on.</p><p></p><p>Marg</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Marguerite, post: 339828, member: 1991"] Something I read about - I think it happened here in Australia, I know it's happened in the US - a kid was sending naked photos of herself to her boyfriend, the girl was about 14. The boyfriend was showing it around the place (so not very respectful of girl who rapidly decided he was ex-boyfriend) and then the boy got hauled in for trafficking in child porn, and having child porn on his phone. I don't think anything was actually done to him except giving him and his mates a thorough scare, that what they were doing constituted just that - child pornography. Because the girls they were getting to sext them, were under-age. Various schools here have different rules on mobile phones at school. One school difficult child 3 used to go to, insisted on all phones being held at the school office all day. Kids had to sign in their phones in the morning, collect them when school finished at the end of the day, because there should have been no need for them during the day. But at the high school that difficult child 1 & easy child 2/difficult child 2 went to, the kids had phones on them all the time AND used them in class. easy child 2/difficult child 2's first boyfriend was a kid on the other side of the classroom who texted her during class, asked her to go with him via txt. Just about all communication between them was via text. She never actually got to go OUT anywhere with him; one time they were supposed to meet up at the beach, I just happened to be driving easy child 2/difficult child 2 there (he didn't know that) and when she texted him to find out why he wasn't there, he texted back that he and his mates had got together and were smoking pot and drinking; he was now too high to go anywhere. Nice. So she tried to ring him so she could talk about this, over the next week. She kept leaving messages to talk to him, kept trying to ring when he would be at home - and he was (allegedly) never home. So she broke up with him - via text. As I said to her at the time - "Can you pronounce 'LOSER'?" Breaking up via text is very bad form. But when you have no other option... I do think that teachers should be able to search kids' phones for inappropriate pics, AND take action. I think it would stop a lot of unpleasantness and inappropriate behaviour. Similarly, with computers. Underage girls sending inappropriate pics of themselves via email are causing trouble not only for themselves but for the boys on the receiving end. Also possibly their parents, whose computers the stuff often lands on. Marg [/QUOTE]
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