Wee Web Solves the Facebook Dilemma for New Parents
Online, October 7, 2010 (Newswire.com) - Wee Web (www.wee-web.com) launched integration with other social media channels so parents can share their kids' Wee Web updates on any social media platform.
"When it comes to sharing your kids' lives online, Wee Web is the better solution for parents," says Cory Bronson, Wee Web cofounder. "Social networking is a part of our world now - it's how so many people get in touch and stay current on what their friends are doing. However, services like Facebook are not equipped to handle new parents. Parents need a different way to handle their kids' stories and media to relay the development and chronology inherent in young children's lives." For parents who store their kids' media elsewhere but want to share occasional posts about their kids on Facebook, there's no way to indicate parentage. Parents use round-about methods such as tagging a photo of their the child as both parents so that the photo shows up in both parents' content streams. "It just didn't make sense," says Cory. "With social networking only trending upwards, parents needed a better way to make their young kids a part of their online community experience."
With this new feature launch, parents can now send any Wee Web album to the social media platforms they use.
"The privacy that Wee Web offers is important to my wife and me so we predominantly store and share updates of our son with our family on Wee Web," says Jason Olim, Wee Web cofounder. "However, I wanted friends to get to see some of the stories about my amazing kid too. His story is on Wee Web, and his family network is there, but with the option to push posts to a social network and share with my friends, it's the best of both worlds."
Wee Web users can share individual videos, photos, stories and more with social networks including Facebook, Twitter, Blogs, and chats. Wee Web protects the privacy of its users and allows them to "re-lock" any album after it has been "unlocked" for public access.
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Tags: facebook, facebook kids, family network, kid safety, Kids, kids on facebook, parents, social media, social networking, tagging kids