A mum claims parents aren't doing enough to protect their children online and shared disturbing screenshots from creepy accounts that exclusively "follow" young kids.
Sarah is trying to raise awareness of child exploitation and reveals three common code words used by paedophiles in a video posted on her @mom.uncharted TikTok account.
"When you post publicly, you cannot control who is viewing your children," she warns.
Sarah then finds "mommy-run" Instagram accounts that show young children in leotards and swimsuits.
"This is from an account of an 11-year-old and she has 169,000 followers and her bio reads 'model, influencer, gymnast, account run by mommy.'
"I clicked on the follower button and I want to show you what I found."
Sarah shows dozens of suspicious accounts, with fake names, no photos, and disgusting hints in their bios at their true intentions.
Often, they follow hundreds of public Instagram accounts of children.
"A lot of these creeps are using the number 69 in their handle," Sarah adds.
The mother also finds an account that is very explicit, with a disgusting bio reading: "I like the little things. Looking for females who do also IRL (in real life)."
Sarah explains that the code words "loli" (short for Lolita) and cheese pizza (slang for child sexual abuse images) are also used by sickos.
The cheese or cheese pizza emoji is also used by paedophiles as a sign to each other that they are interested in kids' content.
A third sick term is DDLG which is an acronym for daddy dom/little girl.
Sarah said: "In my opinion, parents do everything to keep their children safe in the physical world but do not give the digital world the concern it warrants."
A child has to be 13 years old before they are allowed to have an Instagram account but many parents are posting pictures of their children on social media before that age.
If the parents don't have their privacy settings on "private" then anyone can look at publicly posted images of their kids.
One viewer shared: "I saw a YouTube family stop "sharing" on their kids' videos and they lost lots of male followers. It's scary."
A second shared: "I saw a TikTok where an influencer mom said she stopped posting her children for no certain reason.
"Noticed her male followers unfollowed."
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