Your child talks about a 'best friend' they met on Roblox. They receive gifts, share secrets. In 2026, the IWF reports +82% in grooming cases. This sentence should stop you cold.
He comes home from school with a smile. He drops his bag, grabs his tablet and says the words that warm your heart: "Dad, I have a new best friend on Roblox. He's so cool — he gave me rare skins for free." You smile back. In 2026, that sentence should terrify you.
According to a report from the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), reports of digital grooming attempts have surged by 82% in just two years. This is not a statistical anomaly. It's a deepening trend — and your children are its primary target.
Grooming: The Manipulation Your Children Never See Coming
Grooming (or cyber-enticement) isn't science fiction. It's slow, methodical emotional manipulation — and it's terrifyingly effective because it exploits the most beautiful thing about a child: their capacity to trust.
The 3 Phases of the Trap
- 🎁 Phase 1 — The Hook: "I'll give you Robux. Free skins. You're my favorite player." Within days, the predator becomes "my son's best friend".
- 🔇 Phase 2 — Isolation: "Let's move to Discord. Your parents wouldn't understand — it's our secret." At this stage, traditional parental controls are completely blind.
- ⚠️ Phase 3 — The Trap: Once trust is established, the child shares a photo, personal information — and the blackmail cycle begins. Sometimes for months.
• 40% of children interact with strangers on online games without telling their parents (Kaspersky, 2025).
• Average time before a child shares personal information with an online stranger: less than 3 weeks.
• The absence of national cyber-education programs in Moroccan and African classrooms makes students particularly vulnerable targets.
Why "Be Careful" Is Never Enough
Your child isn't naive. They're emotionally human — and against an adult who has spent years refining manipulation techniques, they have no chance without concrete educational tools.
- 🚫 "Don't talk to strangers" — For a 10-year-old, their "Roblox best friend" is not a stranger. They're a friend.
- 🔓 Parental controls block websites — Not intentions. A predator can operate within the chat of a game perfectly "approved" by Family Link.
- 💬 Banning creates secrecy — The more you ban, the more they hide. And in the shadows, predators thrive.
"You cannot be behind every pixel. But you can make sure your child knows exactly what to do when you're not there."
Cyber Sqool: Turning the Child Into the First Line of Defense
The answer doesn't come from yet another surveillance app. It comes from active, experience-based education — and that's precisely what Cyber Sqool delivers in schools.
How Cyber Sqool Training Works
- 🎮 Immersive simulation: Children are placed in real scenarios — they receive a suspicious friend request and must analyze and decide. Each right decision earns points. They experience the threat before encountering it.
- 🧠 Reflexes, not rules: We don't tell them "danger = stranger." We teach them to recognize behavioral warning signals — sudden gifts, requests for secrecy, invitations to switch platforms.
- 🏆 Digital Hero Certification: By the end of the program, the child is no longer a passive target — they're an educated actor in their own digital safety.
⚠️ Parents: The next time your child mentions a "best friend online"...
Don't punish them. Educate them. Contact us to discover how Cyber Sqool turns that conversation into a shield.
💬 Speak to an expert →🏫 School Directors: Make digital vigilance a natural reflex for your students.
Full deployment in 48 hours. Dashboard. Certification. A powerful argument for your parents.
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