
Talking about the utopian version of devices for kids and just people, talking about what technology can do for people’s self-determination and consensus building is an important part of figuring out what direction to go in. Maybe this is a whole special project and more than /e/ can take on at this time, but it seems like there’s this dystopian view of smartphones right now, that does revolve around some serious issues, but ignores the potential. SAVE TIME Cut down on jobsite inefficiencies and routine processes that take longer than they need to.


Wasn’t there a Chrome extension that flagged paid for content? Something like that. Oh, another thing would be to contextualise the stuff they’re looking at.
ADGUARD SMARTAPP HOW TO
One of the more frustrating things is kids talking about something online but having no clue where it was or how to find it again. We trust kids to do that when something is up at school, why not trust them to do that with phones as well? Let the kid get in touch with their parents if there’s something going on. Maybe even with a couple of options like “this is cool, you need to see this” and “this is scary/weird/unsettling, what is going on here”. AdGuard VPN Unlimited & Fast 4+ Private VPN & Proxy Master Adguard Software Limited 7 in Productivity 4.7 3.6K Ratings Free Offers In-App Purchases Screenshots iPhone iPad With AdGuard VPN, you will have limitless opportunities, and your personal data will be securely protected.

One thing that might be a neat feature is a simple “share with parents” button, that kids can use when they want their parents to see something. AdGuard ad blocker effectively blocks all types of ads on all web pages, even on Facebook, YouTube and others What AdGuard ad blocker does: Blocks all ads: video ads (includes YouTube adblock), rich media advertising, unwanted pop-ups, banners and text ads (includes Facebook adblock) Speeds up page loading and saves bandwidth, thanks to the missing ads and pop-up windows. This app is available only on the App Store for iPhone and iPad. Phones do make it fairly simple to share something, but that would include sharing it in lots of ways and places. One perspective in the privacy/surveillance debate is that kids actually want to share and talk about what they’ve seen.
