2021年6月12日 星期六

What Weird Games Lurk on Your Kid’s Tablet?

Huge Kid Cesarean Birth in Hospital? Toddler Foot Doctor?
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Why is my preschooler doing virtual surgeries? On the left: a still from Huge Kid Cesarean Birth in Hospital. On the right: a still from Toddler Foot Doctor.Dress Up Mix, Mikhail Trishin

On Monday, Sara Schaefer was hanging out in her brother's living room in Midlothian, Va., with her 5-year-old niece, who was playing a game on her tablet. Two days earlier, the kid had put $900 worth of toys and princess-related detritus in the family's Amazon shopping cart, though she was unsuccessful in purchasing her haul. So her tablet use was getting a little extra scrutiny.

ADVERTISEMENT

When Ms. Schaefer looked over at the game, she realized its levels corresponded with months of pregnancy. "I can see that the princess she's picked out is pregnant, and you're finding items for her. You're making her a smoothie, you give her a massage." That's when she realized this was no ordinary kids' game. "The massage part is where I'm like, this is weird. You have to rub the varicose veins away?" Ms. Schaefer said.

The game gets even more bizarre from there. When the player gets to the ninth level, she measures the baby and then is told that the baby is too big and a C-section is needed. "You have to use the scalpel, it's not gory, but you have to use the clamps to hold the skin back," Ms Schaefer said. "Then you get the baby, and it has a whole blond head of hair as it's starting to peek out the incision, it's creepy."

Once the player sutures the C-section wound, the game ends with a skinny princess holding an enormous 14-pound baby. That's when Ms. Schaefer discovered the official name of this cursed game: Huge Kid Cesarean Birth in Hospital.

When I saw Ms. Schaefer's Twitter thread about the game earlier this week, I had so many questions. The first being: Why? Why would someone make this game? And should I be constantly updating the parental controls on my kids' devices so they don't download weird games that could scar them for life?

ADVERTISEMENT

My efforts to reach the game's creators were unsuccessful as of press time. But I did talk to Craig Chapple, a mobile insights strategist at SensorTower, a research firm that reports on the app market. His first response to Huge Kid Cesarean Birth in Hospital was: "This is kind of wacky."

Mr. Chapple explained that there are a ton of strange, simple games on the app market. (He described a popular one called Slap Kings, which just involves slapping people.) They find their audience either through advertising on other games, or by using search ads — so if you're searching "fashion" or "baby" games on an app store, their games will come up first. The companies make money on these free games either through advertisements, in-app purchases, or by advertising paid apps on free ones.

The fashion category alone — which includes the trashy makeup application games my kids love — grew 109 percent in 2020, reaching 991 million downloads, according to a SensorTower report. Ms. Schaefer does not know how her niece came to download Huge Kid Cesarean Birth in Hospital, though she speculated that her niece saw the princess-looking cartoon character icon and was drawn to it — the child can't read fluently yet, so certainly had no idea what she was getting into.

The game is made by a company called Dress Up Mix, which has made scads of other baby care games, including one called Old Elsa Care Her Baby. Here's the description: "Elsa is so busy that she looks like an old woman. Her face is wrinkled, her hair becomes silver white. But she has to take care of her baby. Girls, let us help Elsa take care of the baby, then help her clean her facial skin and help her dress up making her more beautiful than before." Rude.

ADVERTISEMENT

The C-section game is rated "mature." I thought I had put restrictions on my children's devices, but I was still able to download it on my younger daughter's tablet. It turns out I hadn't done it right, and I found that my 4-year-old had downloaded a game called Toddler Foot Doctor, which is not exactly inappropriate but involves giving a toddler foot injections to kill germs.

Obviously I need to be monitoring my children's gameplay more closely. So I asked an expert on kids and tech for her advice about best practices. Anya Kamenetz, the author of "The Art of Screen Time: How Your Family Can Balance Digital Media and Real Life," said that one option is to familiarize yourself with the array of controls you can put on your kid's devices and get granular about it. Each tablet and computer has its own unique set of parental controls, and in an article for NPR Ms. Kamenetz offers additional recommendations about apps you might use, like Family Link, FreeTime and Parental Controls to put boundaries on your child's tech use.

"Optimally, there's no substitute for sitting on your couch with your kid and looking at what they've downloaded," Ms. Kamenetz said, but she stressed that once you have some controls and ground rules in place, this connection doesn't have to be more than five minutes each day.

With all of the games your children play, she said, you're looking for the risks as well as the benefits. For example, my older daughter plays Roblox, and especially in this remote year it has been a wonderful way for her to connect with her friends and also flex her creativity in designing her own apartments and homes. It has kept her occupied when we don't have child care and her dad and I have work. The downside is that she plays a game within Roblox that has a murderous pig in it, but I believe the benefits here outweigh the harm.

The most important thing, Ms. Kamenetz said, is keeping the lines of communication open, so that if your children do see something disturbing, they feel comfortable coming to talk to you about it. After all, once they're out in the world with their friends who might have a fully unrestricted phone at the playground, your kids are beyond any controls you might put on their devices.

For the C-section game in particular, Ms. Kamenetz said she was less concerned about the surgery warping a young child's brain, and more concerned about the depiction of an unnaturally skinny cartoon character who drops all her baby weight the minute she gives birth to a huge kid, and that's something she might talk to her daughters about.

Ms. Schaefer said she did not think her niece was scarred by this experience, though her brother is deleting the app. "We were all laughing and it was pretty benign fun," she said. I didn't delete Toddler Foot Doctor from my preschooler's device. Maybe she'll become a podiatrist some day, all because of this early experience in foot care. Or, maybe it's just some silly game she will use to pass the time.

THIS WEEK IN NYT PARENTING

Article Image

Jackie Ferrentino

My Kid Sold Her Soul to Roblox

It's my daughter's main social outlet, and I'm not taking it away from her.

By Emily Flake

Article Image

Michelle Mildenberg

I Was a Screen–Time Expert. Then the Coronavirus Happened.

An author reflects on her pre-pandemic pronouncements about children's technology use and offers new advice, like focus on feelings, not screens.

By Anya Kamenetz

Article Image

Paul Ratje for The New York Times

In the U.S., vaccines for the youngest are expected this fall.

Pfizer and Moderna are testing their vaccines in children under 12, and are expected to have results in hand by the end of the summer.

By Apoorva Mandavilli

Article Image

Yogee Chandrasekaran

How I Hold It Together: Texting and More

Here are six ways I've attempted to find space for myself in this odd pandemic year.

By Jessica Grose

Article Image

Max Guther

Answers to 20 Questions About Getting a Good Night's Sleep

Tossing and turning? We've got you covered.

By Anahad O'Connor

Article Image

Flora Hanitijo for the New York Times

The Pandemic Messed With Your Sleep. Here's How to Feel Rested Again.

You can overcome 'coronasomnia.' Experts say it just takes practice building new and better habits.

By Anahad O'Connor and Flora Hanitijo

Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

My four-year-old was being obstinate and about to LOSE IT until I started chirping at her like a bird. We had a conversation entirely in chirps and I pantomimed what I needed her to do and she actually followed my mama bird instructions. Cheep cheep. — Shay Fan, Los Angeles

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

SUBSCRIBE TODAY

If you've found this newsletter helpful, please consider subscribing to The New York Times — with this special offer. Your support makes our work possible.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for NYT Parenting from The New York Times.

To stop receiving these emails, unsubscribe or manage your email preferences.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

HI

My name is Havilah Anthony, excuse me for bothering you but i have some important information's for you, so contact me back for more details thanks

2021年6月11日 星期五

The Daily: Our Country Is Being Hacked

And what you can do about it. Plus, telling the story of two women whose work has shaped the world.

Hi everyone, Happy Friday. We had a busy week exploring some big questions: Will Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel fall? Who is hacking the U.S. economy? And what could possibly have brought Congress together in a rare act of bipartisanship (even if only for a moment)?

Our team also hosted a special live event that went behind the scenes of the making of "Odessa." If you missed it, you can catch the conversation with Michael Barbaro here, as well as a performance from the Odessa High School marching band.

Today in the newsletter, we follow up on our episode from Tuesday, asking our guest to explain what we can do to keep ourselves, our families, companies and even our cities safe from ransomware attacks. (Sadly, yes, it really is up to us.) Then, we introduce you to the work of two women who have reshaped our world, but who you might not have known about before this week.

Why your cyberhygiene matters — a lot

By Nicole Perlroth

ADVERTISEMENT

Waiting for fuel at a gas station in Dunwoody, Ga., last month, after a cyberattack shut operations at Colonial Pipeline, the main supply link for the East Coast.Elijah Nouvelage/Bloomberg

Ransomware attacks have suddenly become our constant background noise. Last month, we rushed to cover the ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline, a conduit for nearly half the jet fuel, gas and diesel supplied to the East Coast. And with the price of gas surging, images of cars lined up for blocks, how could we not? Then they came for our meat, hijacking JBS, a Brazilian company that is one of the world's largest meat suppliers. This, on top of Covid-induced labor shortages at meat plants, hiked the price of carne asada on the menu.

But we can't cover them all. Ransomware groups have struck our wineries, our professional sports teams, our ferry services and our hospitals — most recently the hospital that services The Villages, the largest retirement community in the United States. They've hit an Apple supplier, the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington and, perhaps most disturbingly, the National Nuclear Security Administration, the federal agency responsible for safeguarding nuclear science and designs. These ransomware attacks are striking every eight minutes. The question is no longer, Who has been hit with ransomware? It's, Who hasn't?

ADVERTISEMENT

Many have asked why the government can't do more to block these attacks. But the answer is that the government does not own these systems and has very little say over how they secure or do not secure themselves. The vast majority of America's food and water supplies, the power grid, dams, even nuclear plants, are still owned by the private sector. And business lobbyists have rejected every serious effort to regulate cybersecurity for the private sector. The market, not the government, decides how secure Americans are, when it comes to deflecting cyberattacks. So we've essentially left every business and individual to fend for themselves.

Over and over and over again we see that these ransomware groups break in through simple means: a stolen password or phishing attacks, in which they just convince an employee to click on a malicious link or enter a password into an attackers' site. And unfortunately, businesses are still calculating that it's cheaper for them to pay a multimillion-dollar ransom than it is to take inventory of their networks, unplug outdated software (or patch it), switch up employee passwords from time to time, require multifactor authentication, and conduct regular phishing simulations until employees learn to stop clicking.

The way out of our cyber-predicament is cyberhygiene — the accumulation of day in, day out investments and inconveniences of hardening ourselves to attacks. If you forget to brush your teeth and floss, you'll get cavities. If you're really negligent, you'll need a root canal.

Online, it's much the same. Good cyberhygiene requires using a password manager, or just not using the same, weak password across multiple sites. It's not clicking on phishing emails. It's turning on two-factor authentication. It's running those pesky software updates that take you away from your device for 10 or 15 minutes. It's backing up your data. It's watching your back, and not giving any old website the ability to track your location, access your contacts or your webcam, without good reason. It's freezing your credit when you learn your personal data has been hacked, yet again, in a breach of a retailer. It's not emailing your Social Security number or nude selfies to anyone who asks. It's not blasting out every transaction you make on Venmo. Or posting screenshots of your Gmail password on Twitter (Hello Congressman Mo Brooks!) It's using encrypted messaging apps like Signal for your most sensitive communications.

ADVERTISEMENT

If you do all of those things, you might still get hacked. But you'll be able to knock out most of the ransomware threats and cyber threats we face. If you don't, you're most likely in for the digital equivalent of a root canal, without the anesthetic.

Telling the story of two women whose work has affected you

This week on The Daily, we introduced you to the work of one scientist whose quiet, pioneering work on mRNA has changed the course of the coronavirus pandemic.

"In this moment, when millions of people have begun to enjoy the freedoms that come with being vaccinated against Covid-19, we really wanted to hear from one of the people who helped get us to this turning point in the pandemic," Anita Badejo, a senior editor, said. "We were surprised by Dr. Katalin Kariko's story, and how long it had been overlooked."

So if you have gotten a Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, read on to hear more about the woman whose work has helped shield you from the coronavirus from the reporter who brought us her story. Then, let us introduce you to another woman whose work has reshaped our world — but who was also overlooked at the time.

Dr. Katalin Kariko: The unlikely pioneer of mRNA vaccines

Dr. Katalin Kariko's work eventually led to development of the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines.Csilla Cseke/EPA, via Shutterstock

I heard about Dr. Kariko last winter when the Science editor Celia Dugger said there might be a story in her work. I'd heard about other key players all along, but maybe because she was working for BioNTech and so was not part of academia any more, I just didn't know about her.

I emailed Dr. Kariko and she got back to me almost instantaneously. I interviewed her for the first time soon afterward and was immediately drawn into her story. She was a scientist's scientist. Someone who does the work because she loves it and who is not motivated by fame or fortune.

While she faced setbacks, including being fired from her job, she viewed them not as signals that she was inadequate but instead as incentives to work harder. She went in search of mentors who would take her into their labs even though she had no funding and no published papers. When I spoke to those mentors, they told me they were dazzled by her brilliance and her dogged pursuit of impeccable science. I have written about science Ph.D.s who gave up and pursued other careers because they seemed to be facing a future like Dr. Kariko's. It says something about her that she refused to slink away when she was rejected. — Gina Kolata, a science reporter at The Times

Linda Amster: A force behind the Pentagon Papers

Linda Amster, center, with, from left, E.W. Kenworthy, Fox Butterfield and Hedrick Smith — three of the reporters who worked on the Pentagon Papers in 1971.Renato Perez/The New York Times

Fifty years ago this Sunday, The New York Times printed the first of a series of articles on the Pentagon Papers — a top secret report about the U.S. involvement in Vietnam. The publication kicked off a fight over the freedom of the press that went all the way to the Supreme Court.

To mark the 50th anniversary of the Pentagon Papers, a team of Times reporters put together an oral history of the project, and shared those interviews with the audio team. One voice stood out — Linda Amster, the project's only researcher.

Linda's work was to verify details in those documents. It was a huge task. But when the papers went to press, her name was omitted from the credits.

We talked to Linda about the thrill and secrecy of the mission — and how she feels about getting her due after the fact. Many view the Pentagon Papers as the biggest scoop of the century. You can hear about it firsthand now.

On The Daily this week

Monday: How did a political coalition come to threaten the position of Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving leader?

Tuesday: Recent cyberattacks have ground major U.S. industries to a halt. Who are the perpetrators and how can they be stopped?

Wednesday: This week, the U.S. Senate put partisanship aside to pass a huge spending bill. The reason for this truce: China.

That's it for The Daily newsletter. See you next week.

Have thoughts about the show? Tell us what you think at thedaily@nytimes.com.

Were you forwarded this newsletter? Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox.

Love podcasts? Join The New York Times Podcast Club on Facebook.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for The Daily from The New York Times.

To stop receiving these emails, unsubscribe or manage your email preferences.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018