True, one of the points I also wanted to make before being flamed.I don't trust technology and companies in this regard, also I don't trust users to use the technology appropriately. This kind of "tracking" is too vulnerable, exploitable and it leads to very valid privacy/security concerns, with data potentially escaping the parents domain. I don't think it is a good idea. I would say, in the other hand, it is a very valid and understandable argument that parents should know where their kids are, parents should care to know about this, and kids should care to let them know about this, but this is a matter of trust and education not a matter of companies foreign to the family trying to insert their product where it does not belong.
You know how those IP cameras are easily hijackable. I also hijacked a few in the past, I have to admit. Like back around 2010 when that trend was starting. Some people just left them completely unprotected/unpassworded. I messed/played with cameras outside of hospitals and such places, just zooming at some parking place/other buildings and turning the cameras around. Didn't really invade anyone's privacy though I just wanted to test what was possible.
This might fall into similar trappings.