March 21, 2024
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Israeli Dad Creates “Facebook for Kids”

Itay Eshet’s 10-year-old said she want­ed a Facebook account. Nothing doing, said Dad. But everyone’s using it, the little girl com­plained.

At that point, some parents would have caved in and others would have ignored the whining. Eshet did neither. He agreed that chil­dren under 13—the official minimum age for Facebook—need a safe social network of their own, and he created one. In Israel, it’s called Ni­pagesh (Let’s Meet) and elsewhere it will be Ne­toKids.

Children sign up through their schools. So far, about 150 Israeli schools have registered to use the program for free, with the cooperation of the Ministry of Education.

“Since at that age kids’ lives are centered around school, we decided to give them a plat­form that will enable them to connect with other kids with similar interests, share ideas and chats, and connect to school as well,” Esh­et tells ISRAEL21c.

Teachers can use Nipagesh to send stu­dents assignments and announcements, start and moderate online group discussions, and cooperate in educational projects with other schools using the network.

And not just in Israel. Moty Kanias direc­tor of the Jewish Agency’s School Twinning Network, tells ISRAEL21c that three Israeli and three South American Jewish schools partic­ipated in a Nipagesh pilot program this year. Funded by the Jewish Agency, the L.A. Pincus Fund for Jewish Education in the Diaspora, and Beit Hatfutsot-The Museum of the Jewish Peo­ple in Tel Aviv, the project is to expand next year to encompass 10 schools in Israel and 10 in South America.

“We hope to connect Jewish kids from around the world on a daily basis through Itay’s network,” says Kanias. “We chose Ni­pagesh after researching all the possibili­ties. It has the signature of the Education Ministry, and it really serves our needs. The next phase will be connecting U.S. schools to South America and to Israel—a sort of triangle. And we are working with Itay to add more languages.”

Headstart campaign to expand network

On May 20, Eshet launched a Headstart crowd-funding campaign seeking to raise NIS 75,000 to keep the service free in Israel.

“We are doing something unique; our business model is not based on advertis­ing. So we ask parents to support us if they think what we are doing is for a good pur­pose,” he says.

Eshet, who has been programming 30 of his 39 years, hopes to roll out NetoKids internationally in September with a sub­scription-based business model, probably targeting Europe first.

“Our social network is multilingual, so we can deploy anywhere,” he says. “I have had several hits from interested people in other countries.”

The six people behind Nipagesh work out of an office in Hadera. “This is more than a full-time job for me,” says Eshet, a veteran of high-tech and the space industry in Israel thanks to his graduate degree in electrical engineer­ing. “We also want to create an application for kids as an alternative to social apps such as WhatsApp, which has an age limit of 16. Par­ents have no control over mobile phones. They don’t know what groups their kids are in, who are the members of those groups. So we want to bring a more suitable alternative to the chat­ting aspect of social media and prepare the kids for using social networking correctly when they’re older.”

Parents of children using Nipagesh/NetoK­ids receive alerts when their children post com­ments and photos, and know with whom their child is chatting, though they may not read pri­vate messages. Both adults and kids can notify administrators if they notice bullying or inap­propriate language on the network.

People often ask Eshet how he cut through bureaucratic red tape to get Nipagesh ap­proved by the Education Ministry relatively quickly. He responds that ministry officials “un­derstood what I proposed was a solution to a problem that they have. They are responsible for education of kids, and technology is part of that—learning how to act online and respect others, learning the limitations of the Internet. In addition, fights that begin online often end up in the schoolyard, so we give [educators] a place where they can control it and be part of it.”

For more information, see www.netokids. com.

By Abigail Klein Leichman, Israel21c

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