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All news with #parental controls tag

Thu, October 16, 2025

Young Europeans’ Digital Aspirations and Future Skills

🔍 Janice Richardson, researcher and Council of Europe expert, reflects on Google’s Future Report, based on more than 7,000 teens from seven EU countries. She highlights young people’s use of the internet for learning, cultural exploration and creative problem solving, noting strong critical thinking and pragmatic attitudes toward algorithms. Richardson stresses closing the digital literacy gap and equipping teachers and parents to support safe, balanced online engagement.

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Thu, October 16, 2025

Supporting Teens Online: Beyond Bans Toward Guidance

👪 The early teen years are pivotal for digital development, and trust between parents and teens matters more than any single setting. Tools like Family Link and YouTube’s supervised experience are valuable, but parents juggling multiple children, apps and devices need simpler solutions—AI assistants could configure age- and app-specific controls. Rather than blanket bans, the piece calls for thoughtful restrictions developed with parents, schools and communities alongside independent digital literacy standards.

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Fri, September 5, 2025

Practical Guide to Reducing Kids’ Digital Footprint

🔒 This practical guide helps parents reduce their children's digital footprint by identifying risky "hot spots"—from unsecured group chats and gaming voice channels to oversharing on social media, unsafe downloads, public Wi‑Fi and unvetted AI tools. It stresses open conversation over heavy-handed controls and recommends concrete measures: disable geolocation, vet links with anti‑phishing tools, use antivirus, a trusted VPN on public networks, and parental controls such as Kaspersky Safe Kids. The guide also encourages parents to watch and discuss online activity together and to teach habits like unique passwords and cautious AI use.

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Wed, July 30, 2025

Google rolls out age assurance to protect U.S. youth

🛡️ Over the coming weeks Google will begin a limited U.S. rollout of age assurance, a system designed to distinguish users under 18 from adults and apply age-appropriate protections across its products. For accounts identified as minors Google will enable defaults such as YouTube Digital Wellbeing tools, disable Maps Timeline, turn off personalized advertising, and block adult-only apps on Google Play. The approach combines machine-learning age estimation based on existing account signals with optional age verification — including a government ID or a selfie — when users dispute their estimated age, and Google will notify users and provide options for adult verification.

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