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| An uneasy dance: Parents and teens both are seeking ways to coexist peacefully on the few social networks they do share. | 
Carly and her mom are friends on Facebook, but that doesn't mean they share everything. 
The 17-year-old from  Marin County, California, has refined her Facebook privacy settings so  that her mother can't see all the posts that fill her Timeline. Her  father, meanwhile, never checks the social network.
"Right now, my mom can  only see things that I post. She can't see anything I'm tagged in or  anything that my friends say to me on my profile," said Carly, a high  school senior who asked to be identified only by her first name. "She  doesn't know that, though. I'm like, 80% sure that every other teenager  has done that too."
With teen-agers and their  parents (grandparents, even) increasingly active on social networks,  both generations are joined in a delicate dance over privacy, safety and  freedom of expression online.
Interviews with a handful  of teens and adults suggest that some teens seek out corners of social  media where they can communicate with their friends and peers away from  the watchful eye, or embarrassing comments, of their parents.
Parents, meanwhile, are  grappling with how to monitor their kids' online activity and keep them  safe without being stifling or intrusive. And both are seeking ways to  coexist peacefully on the few social networks they do share.
Reputation is everything
Today's teenagers are  social media natives. They've grown up putting their personal  information online and are comfortable sharing photos and videos of  themselves, updating relationship statuses and checking into locations.
What they don't share  their parents' level of concern about privacy and worries about  companies or the government abusing their data. According to a recent study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project, only 9% of teens reported being "very concerned" about third parties accessing their data.
That doesn't mean  they're reckless with their personal information, according to Pew  research. Most teens exert careful control over what information is seen  by whom, but more because they are acutely aware of how each nugget of  posted information, even the number of likes it can get, shapes how they  are perceived by peers.
Pew found that teens  have developed a variety of ways to control their privacy. They are  comfortable navigating Facebook's notoriously complicated privacy  settings, and only 14% have public-facing Facebook profiles. They also  edit what appears on their profile, deleting posts, comments and  unwanted tags.
For teens looking to  hide social-media activity from adults, elaborate privacy settings can  sometimes be unnecessary. Fifty-eight percent of teens said they posted  updates that were inside jokes or coded messages that only certain  friends would understand.
Seeking out new online homes
Many teens are learning  how to compartmentalize the different parts of their lives online.  Facebook is the most popular site for both teens and parents, according  to Pew, but teens reported "waning enthusiasm" in the site in Pew focus  groups. They cited the colonization of the site by adults and excessive  amounts of "drama."
Some teens use Facebook  for public posts but message each other on lesser-known social platforms  that their parents aren't aware of or haven't signed up for.
Many teens are also on  Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, Vine and Pinterest -- sites where they  report feeling less social pressure and more freedom to express  themselves. Twitter has seen rapid growth among young users, while Vine,  with its looping six-second videos, is a creative form of messaging for  a visually oriented generation.
Even straight-laced  LinkedIn is courting teenagers. Earlier this month the social media site  for professionals lowered its minimum age to 14 from 18 and announced  special new pages for universities, hoping to edge into the  college-selection process.
If teenagers really  don't want something to be seen, they'll retreat to more private  messaging tools such as Kik, WhatsApp or Snapchat, which can be used to  send private messages to groups of friends. SnapChat is a mobile app  which lets users share photos or videos that disappear after a few  seconds. For that reason, it's gained a reputation for promoting the exchange of risqué images.
"On Snapchat ...  anything goes!" said Carly, the Bay Area teen. "Snapchat gets a little  crazier because it's supposed to be 'erased' after 10 seconds or less.  Not sure if that's actually true, but there's definitely a different  sense of security with Snapchat than Facebook or Instagram."
Making peace with parents
Some kids and parents say they have worked out ways to share social networks harmoniously.
According to the recent  Pew study, only 5% of teens reported setting up filters for their  parents, and the majority (70%) are friends with their parents on  Facebook.
Julie LaRue and her 16-year-old daughter are both mainly on Facebook, but the two have agreed on some boundaries.
"Her ground rule for me  is to not comment on her friends' comments unless they are directed to  me, and not to tag her in photos without her consent," said LaRue, who  lives in Baldwinsville, New York.
LaRue also stays off of  her daughter's other social networks, including Tumblr, Twitter and  DeviantArt. In exchange, her daughter is heeding her warnings against  sharing personal information online and has promised not to post any  photos she wouldn't be comfortable showing her parents.
Along the same lines,  Carly's mom will tag her daughter in photos and like her posts, but she  doesn't comment much because she knows it's embarrassing to her  daughter.
Carly, for her part, tries to keep it clean.
"I really try to not  have any pictures of me from any parties or any captions/comments with  swear words ... but it's hard to be 100% clean when your entire life is  online," she said.
CNN 
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