News

Plenty of parents see covering up their children’s faces online as a happy medium, allowing them to share family snaps without encroaching on their privacy. But is this actually effective, or just a ...
I need to be brutally honest here: putting an emoji over a child’s face provides virtually no real privacy protection ...
Pick a screen, any screen, and chances are someone is deep in a text conversation. While phone calls are still around, ...
They’ll share photos of their offspring, yes, but – and here’s the crucial bit – they’ll obscure the kids’ features entirely by popping an emoji over their faces.
Children can’t really consent to having their lives splashed around the internet, with or without emoji cover. And once photos of them are uploaded, they’re effectively preserved in digital amber.
Erin Krakow, who has been playing Elizabeth Thornton since the very beginning, took to Instagram to mark the start of Season ...
As fireworks were meant to light up the sky this Fourth of July, a devastating storm instead brought darkness to Central ...
Justin Bieber is embracing fatherhood with joy, sharing a heartwarming video of himself bonding with his son Jack Blues amid ...
Liverpool reportedly offer 19-year-old Scotland winger Ben Doak to Crystal Palace as Heart of Midlothian keep communication ...
Melanie Brown, better known to fans around the world as Scary Spice, tied the knot with her fiancé, hairstylist Rory McPhee, ...
Tributes have poured in from the Manchester City first-team squad after the tragic passing of Liverpool forward Diogo Jota ...