If you give a fourteen-year-old boy internet access – even with tight parental controls – then one particular thing is definitely going to happen shortly afterward behind closed doors. It’s not pleasant, it’s not pretty, but hormonal teenage boys are what they are.
But it’s safe to say that doing that generally doesn’t throw an entire family into utter chaos to the point that they may be facing complete financial ruin. Enter Reddit poster NearbyNeck3162, who approached r/LegalAdviceUK with a rather… unique problem.
In a post entitled “My son pleasured himself in front of Gemini Live with the camera. My entire family have had our Google accounts banned”, he explained:
“He’s 14 and stupidly decided to try and roleplay with Gemini using its live camera mode. The AI correctly identified he was underage and Google banned all my accounts.”
This unfortunate father then ran through the awful consequences of this teenage indiscretion:
“ALL of our entire family’s Google accounts were linked to that tablet. Google banned them all.
Everything gone. 15 years of business completely inaccessible. All my emails, all my documents saved in Google Drive. Even my website was linked to my Google account and that’s been locked down too. We’ve written to Google and begged for it to be reinstated but they’ve said all the accounts have been shut down for child protection reasons.
I don’t know how I’m going to pay my mortgage in 3 months time. I’ve literally lost ALL my records for my accountant. My company year ends in May. My whole life is completely f–ked.”
The nightmare continues
But wait, it gets worse! His eldest daughter was at college, working on her dissertation on Google Docs:
“My eldest daughter is at university. She was writing her dissertation on Google Docs because she had a hard drive break in 1st year and didn’t want to go through that again. She’s lost access to her dissertation and submission deadline is only a few weeks away. None of us did anything wrong and we’re being punished for what my stupid son did.”
He later added:
“My daughter was having a breakdown in Scotland because her dissertation is due in 7 weeks. I tried to book a flight to see her and realised I couldn’t do that without an email address.”
But wait, it gets worse! Again! A reply pointed out that he may be overlooking that his son effectively created child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and then uploaded it to Google’s servers.
Even though the person depicted is himself, the son has committed a crime under UK law, and Google may be legally required to report this to the cops for further investigation, who may then seize all electronic devices in the home.
“Sorry to add this to your plate but if I was you I would be seeking legal advice now because I would say there is the real possibility that you will be getting a visit from the police.”
Unfortunately for this poor father, the consensus is that there is no appealing this and that all the information contained within those Google accounts is now permanently gone. Google is almost certainly in the clear here, as strict regulations surround CSAM material online for obvious reasons.
Despite everything, you have to feel sympathy for the 14-year-old boy at the heart of this story. He is simply a dumb teenage boy doing dumb teenage boy things and obviously had no idea his little moment of “self-pleasure” would bring the roof crashing down on literally every member of his family.
I guess… lesson learned?
Published: Apr 1, 2026 07:02 am