Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.

This study examines the extent to which popular British motherhood influencers infringe on their children's privacy by posting images of them online. We conducted a content analysis of 5,253 Instagram posts from ten UK-based influencers, supplemented by self-reported data from these influencers...

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Main Authors: Katherine Baxter, Barbara Czarnecka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0314472
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author Katherine Baxter
Barbara Czarnecka
author_facet Katherine Baxter
Barbara Czarnecka
author_sort Katherine Baxter
collection DOAJ
description This study examines the extent to which popular British motherhood influencers infringe on their children's privacy by posting images of them online. We conducted a content analysis of 5,253 Instagram posts from ten UK-based influencers, supplemented by self-reported data from these influencers. This represents the first comprehensive analysis of actual sharing practices in the British motherhood influencer industry, linking observed behavior with self-reported perceptions. Children appeared in over 75% of the posts (3,917), though the proportion of posts containing embarrassing, intimate, or revealing content was relatively low (11.5%). Notably, sponsorships and product advertisements were present in 46.4% of posts featuring children, indicating that children's images are frequently used for financial gain. Despite this, post popularity did not vary based on the inclusion of children, as posts featuring children did not receive more likes than those without. Influencers reported strong trust in online safety on Instagram, and reported indifference or willingness to sharenting suggesting that sharing images of their children may be a deliberate strategy rather than an accidental act. Half of the influencers did not accurately estimate their past sharenting behavior. This study extends the existing body of knowledge on sharenting behaviour and the privacy paradox by establishing a foundation of parents' real-world posting habits and connecting them to their beliefs about publicly sharing their children's images in the UK context. The findings do not strongly support the privacy paradox in this sample.
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spelling doaj-art-8a46aece20604d49a8b04309f1e3226d2025-08-20T02:13:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01201e031447210.1371/journal.pone.0314472Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.Katherine BaxterBarbara CzarneckaThis study examines the extent to which popular British motherhood influencers infringe on their children's privacy by posting images of them online. We conducted a content analysis of 5,253 Instagram posts from ten UK-based influencers, supplemented by self-reported data from these influencers. This represents the first comprehensive analysis of actual sharing practices in the British motherhood influencer industry, linking observed behavior with self-reported perceptions. Children appeared in over 75% of the posts (3,917), though the proportion of posts containing embarrassing, intimate, or revealing content was relatively low (11.5%). Notably, sponsorships and product advertisements were present in 46.4% of posts featuring children, indicating that children's images are frequently used for financial gain. Despite this, post popularity did not vary based on the inclusion of children, as posts featuring children did not receive more likes than those without. Influencers reported strong trust in online safety on Instagram, and reported indifference or willingness to sharenting suggesting that sharing images of their children may be a deliberate strategy rather than an accidental act. Half of the influencers did not accurately estimate their past sharenting behavior. This study extends the existing body of knowledge on sharenting behaviour and the privacy paradox by establishing a foundation of parents' real-world posting habits and connecting them to their beliefs about publicly sharing their children's images in the UK context. The findings do not strongly support the privacy paradox in this sample.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0314472
spellingShingle Katherine Baxter
Barbara Czarnecka
Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.
PLoS ONE
title Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.
title_full Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.
title_fullStr Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.
title_full_unstemmed Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.
title_short Sharing images of children on social media: British motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox.
title_sort sharing images of children on social media british motherhood influencers and the privacy paradox
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0314472
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