Parent Sends Special Pictures To Distant Grandmother Who Keeps Breaking Promise

A mother living continents apart from her grandchildren pleaded for new photos of her six-year-old grandson and the newborn baby. She gave her word to keep every image completely private after breaking trust once before. Yet the pictures soon appeared on a relative’s page, except they were all clever fakes created with artificial intelligence.

The discovery triggered fury when the grandmother demanded genuine shots and family members split over whether the parent had gone too far or simply stood firm.

A parent used fake AI-generated photos to test a grandparent’s promise not to share children’s images online.

Parent Sends Special Pictures To Distant Grandmother Who Keeps Breaking Promise
Not the actual photo.

'Aitah for sending my mom fake pictures of my son because she refused to stop sharing them on social media?'

I have a six year old son. When he was born I shared his pictures with a group of people I trusted. This included my mother.

The entire group knew that my husband and I did not want these shares publicly. My mom shared them on her Facebook to everyone.

I stopped sharing with her at all. We live on different continents so that's the only way she would have gotten to see him. Except when we visit back and...

We recently had our second child. My mom begged for pictures. I made her promise not to share them

I said that I was only sending to her and that I would know if she shared them.

Then I generated a bunch of pictures and sent them to her. Within a week I found them on my aunt's Facebook. I called my mom and asked WTF.

She said it wasn't her fault because she didn't post them. I asked her how my aunt got them and she shut up.

Problem came up though. One of my cousins pointed out that all the pictures were generated.

My mom got mad that I had sent her fake pictures and demanded real ones.

I declined since she obviously can't be trusted. This is causing stress in my family and friends back home.

Some think I'm wrong for being so a__l about my children's images online. Some think I was a jerk for sending take pics.

Most understand why I did what I did. But some of them still think I'm being cruel to my mom.

The core issue boils down to one simple but loaded request: respect my boundaries on sharing my children’s images online. After a first betrayal with the older child’s photos, the parent set a clear rule for the new baby. When that promise shattered again, the fake pictures served as both a test and a memorable lesson in consequences.

From one angle, the grandparent’s actions seem driven by genuine longing. Living far apart makes those visuals a lifeline for connection. Many grandparents crave that daily dose of grandkid cuteness to feel involved.

Yet the repeated sharing without permission highlights a common generational gap: older adults often grew up in a pre-social-media world where sharing meant passing around physical albums, not broadcasting to potentially millions with a click.

On the flip side, the parent’s firm stance protects something irreplaceable: the kids’ privacy and safety in an era where images never truly disappear. Once uploaded, photos can be saved, repurposed, or worse. This isn’t just about hurt feelings; it’s about real-world risks in our hyper-connected age.

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Broadening out, “sharenting” – the casual sharing of children’s lives online, has become incredibly common, yet it carries hidden dangers. A Barclays study projected that by 2030, nearly two-thirds of identity theft cases could stem from sharenting. Surveys also show that around 50% of images found on certain exploitative sites originated from innocent family posts on social media or blogs.

Law professor Stacey Steinberg, who has extensively researched this topic, puts it plainly: parents must weigh “the right to post their child’s milestones and accomplishments online against the right of a child to dictate their own digital footprint and maintain their privacy.” She emphasizes that images can escape even “private” circles through hacks, forwards, or data mining.

This situation perfectly illustrates Steinberg’s point. The parent’s creative response wasn’t cruelty but a boundary-enforcement tool after trust eroded.

Neutral advice here? Open family conversations work best: set explicit rules upfront, use secure private messaging apps instead of public posts, and consider face-blurring or back-view shots when sharing is unavoidable. Grandparents can stay connected through video calls or printed albums. Ultimately, every family dynamic differs, so tailoring solutions with empathy on both sides often prevents these blow-ups.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Some people find the response hilarious and support it as a strong boundary enforcement.

Its_Nobody_Nowhere − Absolute power move. NTA. That's hilarious. She needs to respect your boundaries regarding your children's privacy.

Mother-Lifeguard-398 − nta but that is f__king funny

True-Attention8884 − NTA. That's hilarious as hell. She doesn't deserve pictures if she can't keep it off the Internet. Does she not understand how the Internet works???!

Some people share personal experiences of enforcing similar boundaries with their own family.

Salamandajoe − My daughter asks the same her other mil would post now she sends only photos to her

with no face kids are shot from behind, faces in shadow with big sun hats, hidden by the pet, etc.

Her mil took hers even further entering her baby in a national baby contest lol

Nanatteacher − My son and daughter forbid me to post pictures of their children on social media and I have always respected their decision.

Some people emphasize the serious risks of posting children’s photos online, especially regarding privacy and predators.

EklipXResearch − My son is a police officer. He made it very clear that posting pics of his newborn son was not permitted.

He told me that he's discovered through his job that peados will use ANYTHING to get a sick kick out of it, especially pictures of little ones on social media.

Remember, once an image is online, it's public property. Tell your mother thus and make her stop!

greenchiffon − NTA - I don’t think enough parents think about the consequences of posting not only photos but “funny” stories about their kids online.

Most of them didn’t grow up with social media and don’t realise once that s__t is on the internet, it’s there forever.

You don’t know which sites will have breaches, even if you only share privately. There are so many p__ophiles out there.

Your child can’t consent to their images being online and you can’t take it back once they’re out there.

I think you’re doing an amazing job as a parent and you have your boundaries spot on.

Some people view the action as justified payback for broken trust.

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Southern-Interest347 − This is called matching energy. You paid your mother back in kind.

She was untrustworthy, and you adapted your behavior based on her actions. NTA

Direct-Muscle7144 − Why is your mother such a selfish disrespectful pain?

Beneficial_Test_5917 − NTA, but you're not very imaginative. Got any photos of a baby visiting Egypt's pyramids? Taking a moon walk? Playing guitar in a famous band?

Do you think sending the fake pictures crossed a line, or was it a fair way to match energy after broken promises? How would you handle a grandparent who just can’t resist hitting “share”? Drop your thoughts below, we’re all ears for the hot takes!

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