Teen Safety on Snapchat Just Increased

Teen Safety Snapchat Featured

If you have teens at home, you know how difficult it is to ensure their safety online, especially on social media. Snapchat is doing what they can to help teen safety on the popular app and making it more difficult for strangers to reach out to them.

New Snapchat Features to Keep Teens Safe

Last fall, Snapchat added a pop-up that warned teens that the message they are receiving is from someone not in their contacts and who doesn’t share mutual friends. It allows teens to pause and consider whether they really want to connect to the stranger. Snapchat claims it has led to 12 million blocks.

Snapchat is now beefing up those in-app warnings even more. They will also get a pop-up if a message is from someone who was previously blocked or reported by another user or from an area atypical to the teen.

Teen Safety Snapchat Closed
Image source: Unsplash

Another previous teen safety measure kept them off of Quick Add and Search, unless they had multiple connections with the person. This has been revamped, so a friend request won’t be allowed if there is a history of accessing Snapchat in areas of scamming activity. This works whether the friend request was initiated or sent to the teen.

Snapchat claims they have never offered public friend lists, as they can be used for sextortion schemes. They have also invested in research to help stop this crime and have collaborated with other platforms to prevent it.

TIP: learn how to do a Virtual Hangout in a group chat.

Other New Snapchat Safety Measures

Along with specific teen safety, Snapchat is also beefing up the safety of all users. While they have also sent all users reminders to check their account safety and privacy settings, and only share their location with friends, these reminders will become more frequent. Location sharing on the Snap Map is always off by default.

Snapchat is also introducing simplified location sharing, to make it easier for you to only share your location with your friends. On the same screen, you can check who you’re sharing with, update the settings, and remove your location from the map.

Teen Safety Snapchat Girl Traveling
Image source: Unsplash

There are also improvements to blocking tools. While you could easily block someone you no longer wanted to be in contact with, you can now block new friend requests sent from the same device as a previous block but sent from another account. This is because bad actors often open multiple accounts using the same device.

There are certainly more teen safety issues than there were when social media was first introduced, long before Snapchat came on the scene. I was bringing my teens up during the dawn of Facebook and Myspace. It was much more difficult then to keep my teens safe. Measures like the ones Snapchat keep introducing are ones we needed all along.

If you’re not a teen and looking to be more visible, consider setting up a public profile on Snapchat.

Image credit: Unsplash

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Our latest tutorials delivered straight to your inbox

Laura Tucker Avatar

Read next

In 2016, archaeologists dated two rings of snapped stalagmites in France’s Bruniquel Cave to 176,500 years ago, evidence that Neanderthals had walked 336 metres into darkness with fire and built architecture deep underground long before modern humans reached Europe
Otto von Bismarck was 74 when Germany adopted the world’s first national old-age social insurance program in 1889, setting the pension age at 70 after years of fighting socialists with bans, laws, and a promise few workers would live long enough to use
When cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov stepped out of his Soyuz capsule in March 1995 after 437 consecutive days aboard Mir, doctors recorded him at several centimetres above his pre-flight height, and his spine had become so unaccustomed to gravity that the recovery team carried him to a chair rather than risk the compression of letting him walk.
When Bell Labs engineer Karl Jansky pointed a rotating antenna at the sky in 1932 looking for sources of transatlantic radio static, he kept picking up a faint hiss that peaked every 23 hours and 56 minutes, and he eventually realized he had become the first human to hear the center of the Milky Way.
When Harvard astronomer Cecilia Payne submitted her 1925 doctoral thesis arguing that the Sun was made almost entirely of hydrogen, the field’s senior figure Henry Norris Russell talked her into adding a line calling the result ‘almost certainly not real,’ and then published the same conclusion himself four years later to widespread acclaim.
When seismic waves from the Chicxulub impact reached what is now North Dakota roughly ten minutes after the asteroid struck, they appear to have triggered a ten-metre standing wave in an inland river that flung fish onto the bank and buried them under glass beads still falling from the sky.
When survivors near Lake Nyos woke on the morning of 22 August 1986, the cattle were dead in the fields, the birds had fallen out of the trees, and 1,746 of their neighbours were lying where they had stood the night before, with no fire, no flood, and no wound to explain it.
In October 2002, a Russian scientist named Dimitri Malashenkov stood up at a space conference in Houston and quietly explained that the dog Laika, whom the Soviet Union had publicly mourned as a heroic week-long orbiter in 1957, had actually died of heat and panic within about five hours of launch.