Microguide

Social Media and Messaging Platforms

Social Media Safety & Boundaries helps families understand how social media, messaging apps, and online communities fit into everyday life, and where sensible boundaries can reduce risk and stress. We'll cover privacy, messaging, group chats, location sharing, online relationships, and how content can spread beyond its intended audience, helping families make informed decisions and build healthy digital habits.

For: Parents and carers
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What matters most

These are the areas that usually make the biggest difference in everyday household digital safety.

  • Who can contact you, message you, or add you to groupsMost unwanted interactions begin with direct messages, group invitations, friend requests, or contact from people you don't know well. Understanding who can initiate contact is often more important than the platform itself.
  • Privacy settings are understood and reviewed periodicallyKnow who can view posts, profile information, online status, last-seen activity, stories, profile photos, follower lists, and contact details. Settings change over time and benefit from occasional review.
  • Location sharing and location clues are managed carefullyLocation can be revealed through dedicated sharing features, photo metadata, visible landmarks, school uniforms, workplace details, event check-ins, and posting patterns.
  • People understand how content spreads beyond its original audienceMessages, photos, videos, voice notes, stories, and posts can all be copied, forwarded, screenshotted, downloaded, or reshared by recipients.
  • Online relationships develop at a sensible paceWhether through social platforms, games, group chats, or messaging apps, trust should be earned gradually. Requests for secrecy, personal information, photos, gifts, money, or account access deserve caution.
  • Group chats can create pressure as well as connectionLarge groups, school chats, gaming communities, and friendship groups can create social pressure, conflict, exclusion, or expectations around constant availability and participation.
  • People know what to do when something feels wrongBlocking, muting, reporting, leaving groups, adjusting privacy settings, and seeking help from a trusted adult or family member are practical skills that reduce harm when problems arise.
Full guide

What the full guide covers

The complete guide is designed to move from understanding the issue to applying realistic settings and routines.

What to keep in perspective

Context that helps you avoid overreacting, underreacting, or focusing on the wrong risks.

Sensible defaults

Practical starting settings and routines that work for most households.

What to watch for over time

Things that may need to be reviewed as devices, accounts, habits and family circumstances change.

Want help reviewing your Social Media and Messaging Platforms settings?

CyberSprouts can help you review communication, privacy and recovery settings across your family’s Social Media and Messaging Platforms.

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