The short version.
Yubo (the largest, France-based, ~30M+ users), Wizz, and Hoop all run the same playbook: claim to be 'friendship' apps, but UX is identical to dating apps — swipe profiles, match, DM, join live video lounges. Age groups are split 13–17 and 18+, but age verification is selfie-based and beatable. Predators routinely operate in the teen tier with stolen or AI-generated face photos.
The platforms and contexts.
Standalone iOS and Android apps. Promoted heavily via TikTok and Snapchat ads. Conversations frequently migrate to Snapchat or Telegram within the first chat.
The timeline.
Yubo launched 2015 and has been the focus of regulator scrutiny since at least 2019 (UK ICO, French CNIL). Wizz and Hoop are newer (2019–2021) and faster-growing. Both have been named in CSAM, sextortion, and trafficking cases by NCMEC and law-enforcement task forces through 2024.
The core facts a parent needs.
- These apps are explicitly designed for stranger contact. Friend-matching is not a side feature; it is the entire product.
- Live video rooms are the highest-risk surface — content is unrecorded, real-time, hard to moderate, and used for grooming and self-exposure pressure.
- Many teens use these alongside Snapchat for off-platform handoff. The pattern is: swipe → chat → 'add me on Snap' → conversation leaves the audit trail.
What's actually at stake.
- Predator contact and sextortion — both are documented at scale by NCMEC for all three apps.
- Sexual coercion via live video — kids pushed into showing or sharing during live rooms.
- Mental-health damage from the 'rated by strangers' dynamic — even friendly use produces measurable anxiety and self-image damage similar to dating apps in adults.
The talk that lands — try it now.
Imagine you just learned your teen brushed up against this. You have 60 seconds before the conversation begins. What you say first decides whether the next 20 minutes opens the door — or slams it.
"What were you thinking? Give me your phone — now."
Panic + punishment in the same breath. The teen reads it as "every honest detail will be used against me." The phone comes; the truth doesn't.
What would you open with instead? Picture it for a beat — then…
"I want to ask about something — no trouble, I just want to understand it. Can we sit for five minutes?"
Curiosity, not court. Promise of safety in the first sentence. Time-bounded so it doesn't feel like a trap. Almost every teen says yes to five minutes.
Then, in those 5 minutes:
- These apps don't belong on a teen's phone. If you find them, have a calm 'this isn't safe and here's why' conversation, then uninstall together. iOS Screen Time / Android Family Link can block reinstall.
- If your teen has been using them already, prioritize a conversation about who they've met, what's been shared, and whether anyone moved to Snap. Lead with curiosity, not punishment.
- Push to alternatives that have closed-network design: Discord servers built around real-world communities, group chats with school friends, Marco Polo with cousins.
Try saying it out loud once before you close this tab. Cool parents rehearse — yelled parents wing it.
Practice 200 more parent–teen scripts →Concrete next steps.
- These apps don't belong on a teen's phone. If you find them, have a calm 'this isn't safe and here's why' conversation, then uninstall together. iOS Screen Time / Android Family Link can block reinstall.
- If your teen has been using them already, prioritize a conversation about who they've met, what's been shared, and whether anyone moved to Snap. Lead with curiosity, not punishment.
- Push to alternatives that have closed-network design: Discord servers built around real-world communities, group chats with school friends, Marco Polo with cousins.
NCMEC CyberTipline 1-800-843-5678 · National Human Trafficking Hotline 1-888-373-7888 · 988 Crisis Lifeline · Local police for active solicitation or trafficking concern.