Macworld

Apple, kids, and iPhone addiction: Parental controls in iOS are long overdue

f0042-01

If there’s anyone who loves our iPhones more than we do, it’s our kids. Whether it’s an iPod touch, iPad mini, or a hand-me-down iPhone 5s, a whole generation of children are growing up with Apple’s mobile devices, giving them a whole new set of risks and dangers to navigate.

But while Apple has done an admirable job keeping the App Store safe and apps engaging for kids, it hasn’t done much to protect them from the effects of to Apple titled, “Think Differently About Kids” in which they note a number of problems arising due to too much screen time. In younger eyes and brains, they write, several hours a day of smartphone use can trigger a variety of factors that may lead to suicide, depression, and sleep deprivation. And they argue that Apple hasn’t implemented any tools or apps that help parents keep their children off their phones and monitor what they do with them:

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from MacWorld

MacWorld1 min read
Hot Stuff
Social media is in love with Fujifilm’s latest, and with good reason—it’s a small yet powerful camera that’s easy to use for novices but has features pros will love. This fixed-lens camera has a 40.2- megapixel sensor that can capture 6K video, five-
MacWorld3 min read
Intego VirusBarrier Scanner
You can’t knock something that comes for free, especially when it works well and meets almost all of your needs. This is the core philosophy of Intego’s VirusBarrier, the free version of its antiviral software, and arguably the teaser that segues to
MacWorld5 min read
14-inch M3 Pro MacBook Pro: The Sweet Spot For Price And Performance
The $1,999 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M3 Pro System on a Chip is $400 more than the base 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M3 SoC. While that higher price tag looks like a lot, the $1,999 laptop ends up being a better value. You get a faster CPU and GPU,

Related