5 Insane Devices for Monitoring Your Kids
We're in the midst of a tech revolution that's changing childhood for the worse. It's the constant digital surveillance of our kids. Here are five devices that are turning moms and dads into the NSA.
(1) Today there are literally hundreds of baby monitors on the market that stream live video, and many are infrared so you can peer in the dark as your baby snoozes under his Mozart mobile. Some models pivot and tilt, which seems like the sort of tool that might appeal to Seal Team 6. But parents?
(2) Then there are all the gadgets you can attach to your baby, like the Owlet monitor. Do you know your blood oxygen level? Why are we treating healthy babies like they need neonatal intensive care?
(3) Making parents afraid for their kids is a goldmine for companies, which explains the coming arrival of Smart Diapers that help parents analyze the chemical content of their babies' output. Because how dare you toss such a vital diagnostic specimen just into the Diaper Genie?
(4) Once the kids venture out, there's a tsunami of tracking devices that allow parents to strap the equivalent of an FBI ankle bracelet onto their offspring. One of these is V. ALRT, which can detect if your kid falls down. Can you imagine how anxiety inducing—and yet completely useless—this will be? "Warning your child has fallen. Commence feeling bad."
(5) The new Apple Watch is a revolutionary device, but I worry it could turn into the Swiss Army Knife of tracking tools—video feeds, GPS locators, biometric sensors.
These gadgets promise they'll give parents peace of mind, but they do the exact opposite. They create constant fear—fear so great that you believe you must buy these things or your child is in grave danger. Once you've become convinced that your happy, healthy baby in her crib needs blood oxygen monitoring—or that you need to track your teen's heart rate and GPS on a date, which is too disgusting to think about, you'll be a total wreck. Meantime, your kids feel all the joy of a prisoner under house arrest.
Saying, "these devices provide peace of mind," is like saying, "this box of mosquitoes will provide a good night's sleep." Do not open the box.
About 3 minutes and 22 seconds.
Written by Lenore Skenazy and Jim Epstein. Produced, shot, and edited by Jim Epstein, with help from Anthony L. Fisher and Dan Rogenstein.
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"and diapers that analyze your baby's poop and pee."
Will they test it for illegal drugs? What if your baby is smoking dope behind your back. You never know what can happen in "The Crib".
But what is Presidential Candidate Rand Paul's position on this?
It doesn't matter what Hillary Clinton's position is, cause she's a woman and supports all the right things.
What about it, Paul?
I'd like an ankle strap that automatically zaps my kids when they whine.
I hear that.
Or detects teenage eye rolling!
Brain-Dead Teen, Only Capable Of Rolling Eyes And Texting, To Be Euthanized
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MGXSPf9b-xI
Is it just me, or is the baby in the screen cap unnaturally huge?
How is the Apple Watch a revolutionary device?
It's a thing that tells time and it's strapped to your wrist.
So we can synchronize train schedules?
How is the Apple Watch a revolutionary device?
Not revolutionary in the 'miracle of modern technology' sense.
Revolutionary in the 'brand lock-in', 'walled garden', 'useful idiots', 'AGW is real or GTFO', 'RFRA will not be tolerated', and 'no-talent hack emulating the ideas of an insane sociopath' sense.
Apple will have access to all your biometrics, phone, email, and media data. Even those of us who shun their crap will be monitored. We are all comrades in the Apple Revolution.
Yeah, uh... you might want to calm down a little, there.
Did Steve Jobs kick your puppy or something?
So will Apple be making a tracking device that includes a status of "mortal peril"?
Sufficiently advanced marketing will be hailed by idiots as indistinguishable from magic.
I think it's time to remake Apple's 1984 commercial, but with Apple as Big Brother.
So, what's "insane"?
GPS monitors? Well, for, say, autistic kids who randomly run off, that's pretty goddamn useful.
Baby monitors? Parents get paranoid about baby status until they calm the fuck down about the kid. Is it horrible to use a glorified webcam rather than walking over?
The Owlet? Yeah, looks pretty paranoid... but new parents are sometimes absolutely goddamn terrified of SIDS. And who might not be? Sure, it's paranoia, but that's the natural state of new parents.
A Kickstarter (a goddamn Kickstarter, mind you) responding to their desires is "insane"?
What does "insane" mean now, Reason?
(And "The new Apple Watch is a revolutionary device, but I worry it could turn into the Swiss Army Knife of tracking tools?video feeds, GPS locators, biometric sensors.".
Yeah, because it's not a GPS locator on its own, and can't be; it needs a phone for that kind of thing. And it has no camera, nor will it be any good for watching video, so it's not a good monitor.
Is this just "hey, let's say Apple Watch because they're good clickbait"?
SERIOUSLY, Reason? Seriously? You had to go for the clickbait?
Pathetic.
Bring back Postrel.)
Oh, and the V.ALRT?
"The V.ALRT is a wearable personal emergency help button which is Ideal for cyclists, joggers, active individuals and especially children on the go." 0 and the top picture on their webpage is of an old guy.
You know, like Medicalert? "I've fallen and I can't get up"?
Seriously, an automated thing to call for help at a button-press, from a little pendant, if you broke your hip, or wrecked your bike and mangled yourself is not "insane".
It's already a wildly successful product that helps save old folks from dying.
(If we want people to not helicopter parent, what better than a way for Little Jimmy to call for help if he breaks his leg at the playground?
Do you expect him to crawl home?)
We crawled home through blizzards with both legs broken and twisted arms. And that was good enough for us.
Thank you so much for sharing. I would even add to the list more sleep trackers or smart pillows that control the depth and level of your sleep. This is a great thing that will help control your child's sleep. I read about these sleep trackers on the website smartifylife