Parents: don't panic about Momo – worry about YouTube Kids instead | Keza MacDonald

One turns out to be a viral hoax. The other is a major platform that is still rife with distressing and disturbing content

I first heard about Momo in my local parents’ WhatsApp group. Someone had screenshotted a Facebook post about a creepy puppet that supposedly appeared in unsuspecting children’s phone messages and spliced into YouTube videos, dispensing advice on self-harm and violent acts. I reacted with suspicion: this would hardly be the first time that something on Facebook turned out not to be true, and the Momo challenge seemed a bit too on the nose – too obviously sinister – to be real.

Related: Viral 'Momo challenge' is a malicious hoax, say charities

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from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2GR7gfl

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