AI deepfakes and teensā digital footprint: What parents should know
AI deepfakes and teensā digital footprint: What parents should know
Molly McGinn for VerizonThu, May 7, 2026 at 4:30 PM UTC
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A young man illustrated with a face recognition graphic as a concept of deepfakes. - Prostock-studio // ShutterstockAI deepfakes and teensā digital footprint: What parents should know
A childās birthday photo, a cute dance video. When shared online, they become part of a familyās digital footprint. Depending on privacy settings, AI could use them.
Dr. Siwei Lyu, a digital forensics expert and father of two, is a distinguished professor of computer science at the State University of New York who studies how AI learns from public data. The danger of sharing anything online is that it becomes fair game for AI deepfakes: fake photos, videos, or voices built from real images or recordings. Deepfakes can impersonate anyone, including kids and teens.
āA childās data might be misused to recreate an image or video of them in situations that arenāt real,ā Lyu explains. āThat content can stay online and affect your child for years.ā
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Quitting social media isnāt necessarily the answer. Instead, Lyu encourages more intentional sharing: post less, choose private settings, and pause before uploading anything personal. For families looking for practical ways to put those habits into practice, Verizon provides resources including tips on managing privacy settings and talking with kids about what to share.
Here, Lyu explains how digital footprints can be manipulated into AI deepfakes.
How real photos become AI deepfakes -
Step one: The photo goes public. When a photo or video is uploaded, it can become accessible beyond the intended audience. Even private photos could be screenshotted and go public.
Step two: Manipulation happens. In some cases, an image has to be uploaded into an AI deepfake tool. Thatās when it crosses from simple image capture to digital manipulation.
Step three: Itās shared. Once created, the content can spread fastāshared on social platforms, sent in private chats, which increases the harmful risks.
Steps families can take to manage their digital footprint -
Experts suggest checking app privacy settings regularly. Set accounts to private and limit who can view or download photos.
Be cautious with āfunā photo apps. Many viral āage me,ā āAI art,ā or ācartoon meā apps can collect and store uploaded photos. Check the appās usage terms for any mentions of using images for āresearch,ā ātraining,ā or āimprovement,ā which may indicate the images could be used for training AI systems.
Teach kids that thereās really no ādeleteā once itās online. Explain that once something is posted online, it can be , saved, or resharedāeven if the person who posted the original chooses to delete it later.
Helping families build awareness around AI deepfakes
Lyu recommends a few practical safety habits for families:
Lyu suggests using animated avatars instead of real photos for social profile pics.
Removing any location data from images before sharing online can also reduce exposure. For example, in your phoneās photo gallery, select a photo, swipe up, and remove the photoās location data.
Watermarking real photos and selfies may also make them less appealing to AI crawlers.
This story was produced by Verizon and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā