A Polk County teen and her older brother have created a website that they hope will put an end to cyberbullying, or at least slow it down.

Allyson Giard, 19, said she was bullied when she was younger and wanted to keep other kids from going through the same thing. So she created Teencitytalks.com.

It’s a website that caters to kids, teens and tweens and its unique features include a bully button that will allow kids to report bullying anonymously.

“I think this will help kids because most kids don’t feel like online is safe," Giard said. "It will help with bullying and kids can actually go online and not get harassed and just play the games or talk to their friends that they want to.”

Giard knows first hand how cruel bullies can be.

“I wore glasses and they would call me four eyes," she said. "I had really bad acne and people just kept saying it because they were cool.”

Giard, now in college, and her older brother hope to deter bullies who attack kids online.

“The bully system is a bully button, so when you go on to your profile in the chats and someone says something really mean to you, you press the button and it’s anonymous and it sends it to the parent and to the admin,” she said.

This way parents can see if their child is bullying another kid online and do something about it. It’s exactly what Allyson’s mom, Dorothy says is necessary to put an end to cyberbullying.

“The parents will be aware of what’s going on now," Dorothy said. "They will get an email saying what’s going on on the site if they’re being bullied."

The website is set to be live this week. Once it is, kids can enjoy games, chartrooms, even personal profiles.

“You’re gonna have profile pages, you’re gonna have all the typical things that you’d find from a social media network but the difference is, that this is geared towards kids and it’s a safe environment,” said All Geeks Media owner, James Lenhart.

It’s an environment Lenhart's tech company helped Giard to create that he says will cater to all ages.

“Anyone that can get on. You can use this on your tablet. I see two, three-year-old children playing around on tablets,” he said.

Giard said they have contacted thousands of schools to let them know about their new website and its capabilities.