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This company tracks your kids online — and tells you about their mental health

Looks like little Susie is doing just fine

Looks like little Susie is doing just fine

Image Credit: Mevoked

Prevention is the new focal point of modern health care. But while doctors worldwide are doing a better job of stopping diseases like HIV/AIDS before they take root in our bodies, they’ve been slower to bring such care to mental health.

Mevoked aims to change that.

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The San Francisco-based startup tracks children’s online activity and delivers regular wellness reports to parents. It’s not about restricting access to the web or social media — plenty of other parental control tools are available for that — but rather providing insight into children’s state of mind, helping parents spot risky behavior that might otherwise remain hidden.

“Mental health is one of the most neglected areas of health care, and especially youth mental health, [which] is extremely neglected,” said Arun Ravi, the founder and CEO of Mevoked, in a conversation with VentureBeat. “We’re trying to use big data for actual insight.”

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Ravi thinks it’s good parenting; others might call it snooping. But how much can a Chrome extension tell you about your kid, anyway?

Quite a lot, asserts Ravi.

“We can look at early indicators of depression, obsession with violence, [and] risk of suicide based on online activity,” he said. “We’re trying to intervene before that happens and empower parents to act.”

A tragic inspiration

When Ravi was 13, one of his close friends committed suicide.

“I remember his parents saying, ‘I wish we knew. I wish we knew,'” said Ravi. “If we can reduce teen suicide by 5 percent, it’s worth it — because right now, everything people are throwing at it is not really working.”

Above: Mevoked provides parents with regular updates on their children’s online well-being.

Mevoked, which plans to release apps for Twitter, Facebook, and mobile devices in the next few months, isn’t too focused on the individual pieces of content children are looking at or posting about — the company is more interested in usage patterns. Are kids using the web instead of sleeping? Are their online interactions overwhelmingly negative? Has their social media activity dropped off? Is there a string of worrisome Google searches? If so, Mevoked will alert you.

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Mevoked is much more focused on what your kids are doing than what they’re seeing. Passive behavior, like browsing websites, receives much lower weight than search and social media data, which is much more intent-driven.

It has a machine-learning aspect, too. Much like Netflix comes to know your taste in movies as you use the service, Mevoked will develop a better understanding of each kid as it gathers vast stores of data on everything they do online. Parents can actively contribute to that process, flagging content that seems inaccurate or irrelevant in a Mevoked report.

“Once we develop a normal level, it’s easy to see what’s up or down,” said Ravi.

One potentially problematic assumption is that kids will put up with Mevoked without a fight. While some younger children might not even realize what Mevoked is or how to turn it off, it’s difficult to envision most teens being thrilled with it. (This reporter remembers when, more than a decade ago, his well-intentioned mother attempted to stop him from playing Diablo II late at night with a parental control program called Net Nanny — which, at least at the time, wasn’t difficult to bypass. Many digital demons faced their deaths just before dawn.)

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Pablo Ferrer, a staff psychologist at the Children’s Health Council in Palo Alto and a Mevoked adviser, thinks it’s essential that parents include their kids as part of the discussion when they’re setting up Mevoked. If your child isn’t comfortable sharing a certain type of information, consider not collecting it, he suggested. (These fine-grained content management tools aren’t available now, but Mevoked is working on them.)

“Building as much flexibility into the tool as possible is going to be absolutely essential to the long-term vision,” Ferrer told VentureBeat. “Have some limits, definitely, but you need to give your kids some space, because the more power that we can give kids in this process, the less likely they are to get around it.”

Parents might have a slightly easier time getting their kids onboard if they agree to track themselves, too. Hey, Johnny, we’re tracking your every move online is a harder sell than This is something the whole family is going to do together.

“We are building a reward ecosystem around this for the family for their openness because talking about ‘issues’ goes a long way in creating an environment that can benefit the child,” Ravi said.

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Into the world

Mevoked launched its beta service Oct. 22.

It isn’t intended to be a replacement for parental communication or traditional therapy; it’s a supplemental tool for an age where kids may prefer to vent about their day — or their bully — with online communities rather than with their parents.

“Technology, as wonderful as it is, has created a generational gap where there’s a lot more cracks for kids to fall into,” Ferrer said. “So we’re trying to create some trip wires, if you will, to demonstrate to parents when that’s happening.

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“It’s really important to have a human being in front of you to share those key moments of pain or joy with you. A computer can’t do that. I hope we can help parents identify some of the moments when they need to be doing that.”

Ferrer thinks Mevoked could be a great tool for psychologists and psychiatrists, too. He brought up the example of sleep logs, which are “practically impossible” for kids to remember to fill out. Mevoked collects some sleep data without active participation from kids, which could make it a more reliable resource.

At this point, parents would still need to provide that observational data, but eventually the company plans to provide direct access for mental health professionals whose patients are using Mevoked.

Addressing privacy concerns, Ravi promised all the data Mevoked collects is anonymous and stored securely in Amazon Web Services’ HIPAA-compliant cloud.

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Mevoked is acquiring users at “a healthy rate,” according to Ravi, who declined to discuss specific numbers but mentioned that Mevoked doesn’t need millions of customers to be a sustainable company. The Chrome extension costs $5 a month or $39 a year, but Ravi is currently working on a freemium model.

Ginger.io is a comparable behavioral analytics company focused on adults. Based on predictive models developed by MIT scientists and engineers, Ginger.io tracks data from your mobile phone to determine your social, physical, and mental health habits.

Ravi could eventually see scaling his platform to adults, but children will remain the focus as the company seeks to grow and raise a seed round. He’s thrilled about future possibilities, though, gushing on the opportunities that would emerge if Mevoked is able cross-reference its behavior analytics with physiological data.

“Mental health and technology are kind of like enemies; they haven’t gotten together until recently,” said Ravi. “We’re very positive about where we can take the solution from here.”

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