Skip to main content

Baby role-play, or virtual kidnapping, is the most disturbing Instagram hashtag ever

instagram hack old icon food headgear
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Creating a virtual reality seems like a relatively harmless enterprise, until your fiction borrows from the actual lives of others. And in what may be the most disturbing trend to hit social media ever, some parents are discovering that their children have become victims of what is essentially virtual kidnapping, or baby role-play. While the constant digital documentation of children’s lives has become something of a mainstay in social media, the sickening phenomenon of baby role-play finds the perpetrators claiming other children’s photos as their own, and then creating elaborate backstories for them. While some are relatively harmless (though still creepy) in nature, others detail gruesome kidnapping plots that, when discovered by the real parents, can be truly traumatizing.

Hashtagged on Instagram and other channels as #BabyRP, the disturbing “game” involves its players essentially stealing others’ content, and then reposting it to their own accounts, adding a new name and a new history to the youngster’s life. According to Instagram, “This type of content violates our terms. Once a parent or guardian reports it to us, we work quickly to remove it.” But still, this hasn’t stopped thousands of individuals from participating. A cursory search of the hashtag on Instagram returned over 57,000 posts, with additional results coming in from variations of #BabyRP.

Recommended Videos

One mother, identified only as Dana, documented her own experience as a victim of the trend on a blog, writing, “While browsing my notifications one day, I noticed that a person had “liked” an awful lot of my photos. As in hundreds. Why was she fangirling me? I clicked on her profile and there they were. Photos of MY son. I scrolled through her feed and was horrified by what I saw.”

Not only did the individual claim that she was the mother of the child (and renamed him), but she’d also added some truly alarming captions, like “Someone kidnapped Liam, they have him tied up in their car.” Dana continued, “Other role-play accounts would jump in with comments like ‘I found the car, I’m following them.'”

While being part of the public domain always carries a risk with it, there are a few steps that can be taken to somewhat lessen the threat — for example, be sure to keep your Instagram account private, only accept follow requests from people you’re acquainted with, avoid posting locations, and watermark your photos. It’s not a catch-all to the creeps of the Internet, but hopefully it’ll keep them and baby role-play at bay.

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
I reviewed an electric car like it was a phone, and I came to a shocking conclusion
The front of the Cupra Born VZ.

The Cupra Born VZ is not a smartphone — it’s an electric car. Yet, during my time driving it over the last five days, it has reminded me more than once about the device I spend most of my time using and reviewing.

This is not a put-down, nor is it a comment on electric versus combustion-engine vehicles, but more about how I, someone who doesn’t professionally review cars, can still easily recognize what’s good and bad about it. What’s more, the categories I usually break phone reviews down into, and the language I regularly use to talk about them, also neatly applies to the Born VZ.

Read more
A must-try Android app has finally arrived on the iPhone
Person holding a phone with Google Gemini Live being shown.

A few days ago, Google Gemini appeared in the Apple App Store for a user in the Philippines, who was even able to download it. We took it as a sign that the new AI assistant would soon make its way to the App Store in the U.S. Well, we were right, as you can now download Gemini as a standalone app on your iPhone, after previously only being able to access it through a browser.

The Gemini app is free to download and has a surprising number of features available. More powerful functions are available for a $20-per-month subscription, but you can try Gemini Advanced out for one month for free. It grants priority access to new features and gives a "1 million token" context window.

Read more
We’ve got our first big clue about the Galaxy S25’s arrival
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra in Titanium Gray in hand.

The Samsung Galaxy S25 has had a tentative early 2025 launch date for months now, but we might finally have an actual date to look forward to. Samsung will hold its next Galaxy Unpacked event on January 23, according to FNNews, a South Korean website, with the Galaxy S25 series as the star of the show. It's the most precise date we have seen yet for the speculated Galaxy S25 announcement.

Take this news with some skepticism, though, as Samsung has not confirmed any dates for its Unpacked event yet. The report also states San Francisco is "a strong candidate" for the city to host the event. The last Galaxy Unpacked event was held in Paris in July.

Read more