Bring God Back
June 4, 2026 I have spent the last eight years immersed in some of the darkest realities facing children and...
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June 4, 2026 I have spent the last eight years immersed in some of the darkest realities facing children and...
"Killer Bites": When a Child's Death Becomes Clickbait on Snapchat
This tragedy happened in 2019.
Yet today, Snapchat resurfaced it as fresh engagement content through a Discover publisher called "Killer Bites" - a true crime channel that packages stories about murdered children, serial killers, missing persons, and violent crimes into short-form videos designed to capture attention and keep people watching.
A two-year-old child's death was transformed into a push notification.
Not because I searched for it or someone sent it to me, but because an algorithm decided it was worth interrupting my day.
The child became content.
The tragedy became the hook.
My attention became the product.
The deeper question is this:
Why are technology companies proactively pushing emotionally charged, traumatic, and sensationalized content to users? Why has maximizing engagement become the default business model instead of protecting human well-being, ESPECIALLY when children and teenagers are using these platforms every day?
That should disturb every parent.
⬇️ I researched what "Killer Bites" actually is, why Snapchat pushed a six-year-old tragedy to my phone, and why I believe Snapchat remains a #HardNo for children.
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This tragedy happened in 2019.
Yet today, Snapchat resurfaced it as fresh engagement content through a Discover publisher called "Killer Bites" - a true crime channel that packages stories about murdered children, serial killers, missing persons, and violent crimes into short-form videos designed to capture attention and keep people watching.
A two-year-old child's death was transformed into a push notification.
Not because I searched for it or someone sent it to me, but because an algorithm decided it was worth interrupting my day.
The child became content.
The tragedy became the hook.
My attention became the product.
The deeper question is this:
Why are technology companies proactively pushing emotionally charged, traumatic, and sensationalized content to users? Why has maximizing engagement become the default business model instead of protecting human well-being, ESPECIALLY when children and teenagers are using these platforms every day?
That should disturb every parent.
⬇️ I researched what "Killer Bites" actually is, why Snapchat pushed a six-year-old tragedy to my phone, and why I believe Snapchat remains a #HardNo for children.
The Governance Problem You Haven't Named Yet: AI in the Hands of Your Children
The Governance Problem You Haven't Named Yet: AI in the Hands of Your Children Keith Zielenski, Fullbright Scholar, MSc, CISA...
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The Governance Problem You Haven't Named Yet: AI in the Hands of Your Children Keith Zielenski, Fullbright Scholar, MSc, CISA...
Overprotected Offline, Underprotected Online: Veronica Sommer Tells Parents What They Need to Know
In this powerful episode of the Connecticut Book Festivals Podcast, host Jed Doherty welcomes Veronica Sommer, author of Sacred Stewardship: Restoring Moral Clarity in the...
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In this powerful episode of the Connecticut Book Festivals Podcast, host Jed Doherty welcomes Veronica Sommer, author of Sacred Stewardship: Restoring Moral Clarity in the...
Is Snapchat Really That Bad?
Last week, I shared a reflection about something many parents feel but struggle to name: the digital world shaping our...
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Last week, I shared a reflection about something many parents feel but struggle to name: the digital world shaping our...