With Australia’s Attorneys-General getting set to discuss not only the R18+ rating for games, but ways to make Facebook and other social networking sites safer for children, is it the responsibility of Facebook, parents or the Government?
A new app has just launched on the App Store, looking to give parents a better way to store memorable photos of their kids. Given the fact that we’re in a digital era, it only makes sense that parents would want to store photos of their children digitally, rather than storing physical photos in drawers, much like my childhood was recorded.
Care.com, the site that helps parents and families find babysitters, nannies, child care and senior care professionals, is today releasing a new iPhone application called Karoo which is designed to connect parents with their child’s caregivers as well as record memories.
If you have kids, you know this situation all too well. You buy your toddler an adorable sweater khaki combo that they grow out of almost immediately, and it’s back to the drawing board.
Australia's parents are struggling to keep their kids safe online due to a lack of tech knowledge, according to new research.
A tool which provides parents with a dashboard revealing their offspring’s online activities has been released by Trend Micro. The tool can reveal what videos kids are watching, what they’ve uploaded to social networks, what terms they’ve searched and what websites they’ve visited.
Facebook and Twitter are the big boys in the social networking space. So big, in fact, that we’ve probably written about them a bit too much in 2010. But hey, why stop in December? This breakdown was put together by Digital Surgeons and shows demographic statistics (and a few fun facts) for both sites.
Spriggle made its debut last week out of the NewMe Accelerator with the aim of building a new, super social way for parents to test out and shop for kids’ toys — by bringing the experience into in-home playdates that are already a way of life for so many families with young children.
Spriggle’s co-founders Susie Ye and Carolina Huaranca tell me it’s essentially a spin on th
Dublin based NewBay has revealed itself as the company whose technology supports Telstra's recently launched mobile social networking service, Tribe, that provides Telstra mobile customers with unmetered access to popular social networking sites Facebook, Twitter and MySpace