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Setting a bad example: children unimpressed by parents’ online behavior


Online vs Real

Social media give us the freedom to communicate with our loved ones, whenever and wherever we want. However, this freedom comes at a cost: blinded by our seemingly happy digital lives we often don’t realize how social media threatens and damages our real-life relationships.

New research from Kaspersky Lab, with 1,000 respondents from the Philippines, shows that a third of people communicate less face-to-face with their loved ones, and 21% of parents admit that relationships with their children have been damaged as a result of them being seen in a compromising situation on social media.

With people’s tendency to post photos of themselves or others under the influence of alcohol, wearing something revealing or even naked in order to get more “likes”, it is evident that social media can damage offline relationships. But while we would expect parents not to approve of their children’s online behavior, it is often the other way round.

More than a fifth of children admitted that their relationship with their parents worsened after they had seen them in compromising circumstances on social media. In contrast, only 14% of parents said they were annoyed by their children’s online behavior.

In addition, around one-in-five (16%) people also said that their relationship with their spouse or partner has been damaged as a result of them being seen in a compromising situation on social media.

In the Philippines, 12.8% of parents said their relationships with their kids were affected by their misbehavior on social media. Meanwhile, 7.9% of children revealed their moms and dads were bothered after seeing them sharing embarrassing posts online.

There are also 11.9% of Filipino respondents who admitted their romantic relationships and marriages were distressed after their partners saw them in disturbing scenes published on social networking sites like Facebook.

Relationships with family, friends and colleagues are changing as people communicate less face-to-face as a result of social media. A significant third of people admitted that they now communicate less with their parents (31%), children (33%), partners (23%), and friends (35%) because they can see and communicate with them via social media.

Filipino netizens surveyed in this study also revealed the same scenario-- of talking less in person and more on social media. They admit they seldom communicate face-to-face with their friends (46.0%), parents (36.9%), colleagues (32.9%), spouses (29.2%) and children (26.4%).

“Studies show that today, digital communication complements real-life communication. We live in a globalized and highly mobile world resulting in distances between partners and family members. Digital communication is an opportunity to bridge the gaps in our modern lives caused by living in different cities or countries. However, digital communication cannot replace face-to-face communication - at least not always and not completely. Digital communication is less rich in terms of sensory channels affected, resulting in “reduced” sensory quality,” comments Dr. Astrid Carolus, Media Psychologist at the University of Würzburg.

Although people communicate less face-to-face, around half of respondents believe that the quality of their relationships does not suffer at all and is even better as a result of being connected with their loved ones online.

Dr. Astrid Carolus warns that although it seems that the quality of our relationships is improving, people cannot always evaluate their online communication objectively. “Under certain circumstances they perceive their online communication as “hyper-personal communication” and thus they can misread and over-interpret the messages on social media. We feel especially close, we blind out the rather negative, focus on the possible positive intentions behind a message, and over-interpret,” adds Carolus.

With the study finding that although social media can help ease communication channels and bridge time zones and distance barriers, it doesn’t always make people happy. It can strain relationships as well as leaving people feeling down and upset, as they constantly compare their lives to those of others.

The hunt for “likes” and social validation leads people to share increasing amounts of private information on social media platforms, putting not only themselves but also their friends, family and colleagues at risk.

For those who decide to shut themselves off from social media, the reality of losing a lifetime of digital memories, including photos and interactions, can make it difficult to do.

In order to protect themselves and their relationships, people need to be more cautious and cyber-savvy about the information they share on social media. That will not only help to mitigate the risks of the online world, but prevent relationship damage in the offline world.

To help people keep their memories safe, no matter how long their online social media journey, Kaspersky Lab is developing a new app. FFForget will enable people to back-up all of their memories from their social networks, keeping them in a safe, encrypted memory container.

Methodology
This study was conducted online by research firm Toluna, October - November, 2016. Users from 18 countries were surveyed online. A total of 16,750 people, aged over 16 years old, split equally between men and women, were surveyed. Data was weighted to be globally representative and consistent.

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