The Tech Shock podcast – Digital parenting and monitoring technology
11 Feb, 2025
1 minute read

The Tech Shock podcast – Digital parenting and monitoring technology

“Some of the young people didn’t even know these technologies were put in place [...] that creates feelings of confusion, insecurity, the feeling of being watched – and I think that is an issue, of rights and what that does to a relationship.” 

The use of technology to assist with parenting is increasingly becoming a norm. The explanation for this is easy to understand: parents want to know where their children are offline, what they’re doing (or seeing) when online, and ultimately, that they’re safe. 

However digital parenting (particularly when it involves monitoring technology) can have a negative impact on wellbeing and family dynamics. It can also raise questions around a child’s right to privacy. 

The University of Oxford’s Ekaterina Hertog and Jun Zhao, and Netta Weinstein from the University of Reading are co-authors on a recent paper exploring the phenomena of ‘data-driven parenting’. In this episode, they join Vicki to discuss the topic as well as some related issues and concerns. 

You can listen to the episode in full, here


Latest Articles


Tech Shock S10 Banner

The Tech Shock podcast – EdTech: "Big Tech in a school uniform"?

Professor Natalia Kucirkova joins Vicki to discuss the impact of EdTech, and what 'ethical' use of it might look like in practice. 

Tech Shock S10 Banner

The Tech Shock podcast – violence against women and girls: what’s needed for change?

Vicki is joined by co-leads at the Centre for Protecting Women Online, Lisa Lazard and Rose Capdevila to discuss ways of addressing violence against women and girls, both online and off. 

'Duty of care’ should mean safeguarding

The internet isn’t a playground: ‘duty of care’ should mean safeguarding

Parent Zone founder and CEO Vicki Shotbolt on the Online Safety Bill, and what 'duty of care' should actually mean.