Please note our new policy as below:
Photographs/other images:Wikivorce does not
permit the use of photographs or other images of children under the age of
18. This includes photographs/images uploaded to the
Photographs section, on profile pages, as content in forum
posts/blog/library etc or as members profile pictures. Any member who has
used/uploaded an image/photograph of a child under the age of
18 is subject to Wikivorce removing that photograph/image
without prior notice.
Posting about
children.Under section …..97 of the Children Act
1989, you must not make public details which could lead to the
identification of a child involved in family proceedings.
(2) No person shall publish to the public at large or any section of
the public] any material which is intended, or likely, to identify—
(a)any child as being involved in any proceedings before
[F3the High Court, a county court or] a magistrates’ court in which any
power under this Act [F1or the Adoption and Children Act 2002] may be
exercised by the court with respect to that or any other child; or
(b)an address or school as being that of a child involved
in any such proceedings.Such details could
include:
Name[s] of child/children (either first or full
name)
Age or date of birth of child/children
Home
address/location, ie town, area within a town
The name and/or
address/ and/or the location of the child’s school
Details of
the child’s activities
Specific medical conditions
Which Court is involved
Specific details of siblings or other
family members
Wikivorce reserve the right to edit or
remove posts/blogs, without prior notice, that contain details that we
believe could lead to the identification of a child/children. Any member
found to be persistently posting identifying details could face an
exclusion from the site.
For example – this
paragraph would contravene this policy:
My daughter
(Sally), aged 9 yesterday was picked up by her dad from her school in
Colchester so she could go to his and have tea with him in Southend. I only
knew about this when a friend called me to say Sally hadn’t gone home with
her daughter after school as arranged. This isn’t in our
contact order. He is only
meant to collect at 5pm from her ballet class on a Friday night.
To re-word the paragraph so it still contains the gist, but not the
identifying details:
My child was collected by her dad from
school on a non-contact night without telling me first – he took to his to
have a celebration tea. The contact order states that he is only to collect
after her activity has ended on a Friday night.
The reason
we have this policy is to prevent potential/possible identification of any
child, but particularly those who may be involved in court proceedings.