Teenagers and younger kids are learning coded predator phrases like 'MAP' online...

Teenagers and children may encounter terms like MAP in memes, comments or other ways online Catherine Falls Commercial
Teenagers and younger kids are learning coded predator phrases like MAP online, long before their parents have even heard of it
Published: April 6, 2026 8:20am EDT
When I checked my 10-year-old daughters TikTok messages in early February 2026, I expected to find the usual mix of dance challenges, school jokes and anime clips. Instead, I saw a stranger ask her, Do you like children? She responded to the stranger: Im not a MAP.
I had never heard the term before. When I asked her what MAP meant, she simply answered that it stands for minor-attracted person. In that moment, I realized something unsettling but important: Children are encountering coded language online long before many parents even know it exists.
Why Im writing about this
In my broader research on online harms to children and teens, I examine how the design and governance of websites and apps influence real‑world safety outcomes.
My forthcoming research explores how social media platforms, messaging apps and gaming communities succeed and fail at protecting young people from grooming attempts, unwanted contact and other forms of online exploitation.
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https://theconversation.com/teenagers-and-younger-kids-are-learning-coded-predator-phrases-like-map-online-long-before-their-parents-have-even-heard-of-it-277460