Locket Widget Safety
What Parents Need to Know
If your child has asked you about Locket Widget, you’re not alone. It’s the app parents are being told is the “safe” alternative to Snapchat and if you’ve had a look at it yourself, I understand why you’d believe that. No public feed, no like counts, no “For You” page serving up strangers’ content. Just a small circle of friends sending photos straight to each other’s home screens.
Locket isn’t a grooming platform. It isn’t full of predators the way some of the apps I’ve written about are. The story here is quieter and in some ways it applies to every app your child will ever use - not just this one, what actually happens to a photo once your child presses send, and whether “safe-looking” and “safe” mean the same thing.
They don’t. Not always. Locket is a great example of why.
What Locket Widget Actually Does
Locket Widget was launched in 2022, built by a developer who wanted an easy way to share pictures with his girlfriend while they were apart.1 It works through your phone’s home screen widget. Your child adds up to 20 people.2 When one of them takes a photo in the app, it appears immediately on your child’s home screen. No notification to open, no feed to scroll, just there, live, the moment it’s sent.
It’s well designed and very popular. The app has passed 10 million downloads on Android alone and industry trackers place it among the fastest-growing “wholesome” apps used by teenagers this year.3 Compared to TikTok’s algorithm or Snapchat’s Snap Map, it has a much smaller attack surface and I understand why parents feel relieved by it.
The Bit Nobody Reads: What Happens to the Photo
Here’s what I want you to actually understand, because it’s the bit almost nobody reads.
When your child sends a photo on Locket, two things happen that most apps don’t do.
First, there’s no preview and no decline option on the receiving end. The photo doesn’t sit in an inbox waiting to be opened. It appears directly on the home screen the moment it arrives.4 Whatever’s in that photo, your child or the friend on the other end, sees it instantly, with no chance to brace for it or choose not to look.
Second, and this is the part that concerns me more as someone who knows what companies actually do with data rather than what they say they do, Locket’s terms of service state that by using the app, you grant Locket a broad, worldwide licence to use content shared through it.5 In plain English, once a photo is uploaded to Locket’s systems, the company has the right to host, store, reproduce and distribute it for as long as that licence runs, regardless of what the photo shows or who’s in it.
Locket says users “retain whatever ownership rights” they started with. That’s true, technically, but ownership and control aren’t the same thing once you’ve also handed over a broad licence to use the content. Once a photo has been sent to a friend inside the app, Locket is explicit that it cannot be deleted from the receiving device.6 There is no “unsend.”
I’m not telling you this because I think Locket is secretly harvesting private images of children. I have no evidence of that. I’m telling you because Common Sense Media’s Privacy Program, which specifically reviews apps from the perspective of children’s data protection, gave Locket a “Warning” rating, citing broad content rights, data shared with third parties for advertising, and no meaningful way for a parent to intervene.7
Why This Matters More Because It Looks Safe
This is the part that actually worries me and it isn’t really about Locket specifically. It’s about what happens when an app is genuinely and meaningfully safer than the alternatives in ways parents can see, no feed, no strangers, no map, and that visible safety becomes a reason to stop asking questions about the parts you can’t see.
I hear this from parents. “At least it’s not Snapchat.” “At least there’s no algorithm.” “At least I know who my child is talking to.” All of that can be true and the app can still be quietly building a permanent, licensed archive of your child’s private photos that they will never be able to fully take back. Both things are true at once and that’s the trap.
There’s a simpler, more everyday risk sitting underneath all of this too. Locket’s friend limit isn’t a technical barrier, it’s a social one. Twenty people, or unlimited with a paid subscription, still means your child is one accidental “friend of a friend” add away from someone they don’t actually know well seeing an image the moment it lands. There’s no time to reconsider and there’s no undo button.
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What I’d Actually Do About It
I’m not going to tell you to delete the app from your child’s phone. For a lot of families, Locket is genuinely a better choice than the alternatives, and I don’t want to catastrophise something that, on the evidence I have, is a privacy and permanence problem rather than a predatory one.
What I’d do is have a specific, practical conversation, not a general “be careful online” one.
• Talk about the friend list first. Sit down together and go through who’s actually on it. Not as an inspection, as a conversation: “Remind me how you know this person?” If your child can’t answer that easily, that’s the moment to talk about removing them, together.
• Talk about permanence before it’s needed. The single most useful thing I say to parents about any app like this is: before you send anything, picture it staying exactly where it is, forever, uneditable, undeletable, seen by a company you’ve never met as well as the friend it was meant for. If a photo doesn’t survive that thought experiment, it doesn’t get sent. That’s the rule, not “don’t send nudes,” which every teenager has heard and tuned out. Make it concrete.
• Talk about what to do if something arrives that shouldn’t have. Because there’s no preview and no decline button, your child needs to know in advance that if a friend sends something inappropriate, that’s not their fault, and they should tell you or another trusted adult straight away rather than sitting with it.
For Teachers and DSLs
If Locket comes up in a safeguarding conversation at your school, the pattern to listen for isn’t “which app” so much as “no preview, no undo, broad content rights.” That combination applies to a growing number of smaller, less scrutinised apps, and it’s worth building into existing digital literacy sessions as a general principle rather than an app-specific warning, because there will be another Locket next year with a different name.
Childline exists for exactly this kind of situation, when something has happened that a child doesn’t know how to handle and doesn’t know who to tell. It’s free, confidential, and available every day of the year.
As always, thank you for your support. Please share this across your social media, and if you do have any comments, questions, or concerns, then feel free to reach out to me via the Social page, as I am always happy to spend some time helping to protect children online.
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If you or a child you know needs support:
Childline: 0800 1111 | childline.org.uk
Available 24/7, 365 days a year. Free, confidential, and here for every child.
The Up and Up / Rachel Janfaza, interview with Locket co-founders, July 2025. theupandup.us. Accessed July 2026. Founder account of the app’s origin story.
Locket Widget, Google Play Store listing, accessed June 2026. play.google.com. Free-tier friend limit is 20; a paid subscription removes the cap.
Techweez, “Locket: Photo Sharing App With No Feed, No Likes, and No Algorithms,” June 2026. techweez.com. Download and rating figures as reported by app stores, not independently audited. Screenwise, “Most Popular Apps for Teenagers 2026,” January 2026. screenwiseapp.com. Community-reported trend data, not a statistically representative survey.
Protect Young Eyes, “Locket App Review,” accessed 2026. protectyoungeyes.com. DeleteMe, “Is Locket Widget Safe?” April 2026. joindeleteme.com.
ScreenRant, “Is Locket Widget Safe? A Closer Look At The Viral App’s Privacy Concerns,” reviewing Locket’s Terms of Service directly. screenrant.com. Terms reviewed as published; always check the current version at locket.camera/terms, as apps update their policies without notice.
DeleteMe, “Is Locket Widget Safe?” April 2026. joindeleteme.com.
Common Sense Privacy Program rating for Locket Widget, referenced via DeleteMe, April 2026, and CancelMates, October 2025. cancelmates.com.






