Want to Spy On Your Children? Call It Monitoring...and Get Their Blessing
Parents, it's OK -- essential, even -- to spy on your children's internet use.
Children are getting smartphones, tablets and iPods at earlier ages, but that doesn't mean they're laying low in " Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood." Just peek at your child's browsing history; sometimes elementary schoolers google like teenagers.
Even if children don't get lost in the internet forest, they can develop bad habits that are hard to spot day-to-day. This is the Big Parental Concern: Are we ruining our children with screens? What's the middle ground between no tech and an internet and app free-for-all?
The built-in restrictions on iPhones and Android devices give parents the ability to lock down many functions and set content filters for media and web browsing. Still, they don't tell parents anything.
So a whole industry has developed around monitoring devices, both at home and away. These services, which often borrow tools used by businesses for managing company-issued phones, have a lot to offer: GPS tracking, time limits, daily usage reports, bedtime blackouts and content filtering.
But add monitoring and you add to the ethical dilemma: Does keeping up with technology mean condemning our children to a parental police state? Before planting any virtual bugs, I sought absolution -- or at least permission -- from a leading parenting researcher.
"Monitoring is critically important for pre-adolescents and adolescents, " Alan E. Kazdin, professor of psychology and child psychiatry at Yale University and director of the Yale Parenting Center, told me. "Risky behavior starts at that time." With dangers ranging from violent videogames to pornography, you'd be tempted to keep children away from machines entirely, but "homework is all online, so you can't say no to web browsers," he says.
The Tools
Dr. Kazdin recommends ways to monitor children without feeling like a spy. But first, let's talk about the tools.
Over the past year, we've seen an explosion of monitoring services that work anywhere, separating them from the networking products that have powered at-home parental internet controls. The services often use common elements: child-safe browsers, which funnel web traffic through servers to filter any naughty material; virtual private networks, which can filter all of a device's traffic; and mobile device management, which gives control of certain functions to a remote IT manager -- that is, the service. Parents get a web or app dashboard to control the settings.
Android phones and tablets take to deep monitoring better than Apple Inc.'s iOS devices, because Alphabet Inc.'s Google allows developers plenty of under-the-hood access, says Josh Gabel, co-founder and product lead for Qustodio LLC ($55 and up a year). For both iOS and Android, Qustodio can provide web browsing filters, internet access time limits, app time limits and location tracking, but only Android devices get call and text monitoring, and a panic button that lets children send location information to trusted contacts.
Likewise, Symantec Corp.'s Norton Family service ($50 a year) provides location, web and search supervision to all platforms, and replaces the iPhone's mobile Safari browser with its own child-proofed one. But only on Android can it offer time limits and monitoring of apps, social networks and text messages.
If you want this level of access, Android really is the way to go. Google even offers its own free Android parental control system, compatible with certain recent devices. Just note: While Amazon tablets run a version of Android, they aren't typically compatible with these tools. Amazon offers its own limited monitoring tool at parents.amazon.com.
Circle Go provides parents with a breakdown of the amount of time children spend on different apps, and lets parents pause internet access, set bedtimes and adjust content filters. Its developers decided to keep Android and iOS features equal, and are rolling out a system for children to earn screen time by completing chores or hitting fitness goals.
Previously only offered as a $5-a-month add-on to Circle Media Inc.'s parental-control networking hardware, Circle Go will be relaunched as a stand-alone service before the end of 2017.
The Flaws
The closed nature of iOS can cause problems. Norton Family and Qustodio let parents make all of the icons disappear from their children's screens as an ultimate "shut off" move. (Turning off the internet alone won't stop children from using many game apps.) But when the apps come back, iOS arranges them in alphabetical order, not as they were. I never wanted to flip that switch, because it would have been cruel after my children arranged their icons so carefully into tidy folders. Mr. Gabel says Qustodio will soon fix this; Symantec says it's looking for potential workarounds.
And then there's the matter of the management profile, which gives the service control of the device: The child can find and delete it. If you want to know whether anyone is spying on your own iPhone, go to Settings > General, then look for Device Management. If it's there, tap it to see which profiles are installed. Just note: It's commonly found on company-issued phones, for your mutual protection.
When Circle founder Jelani Memory recently remarried, he put his company's Circle Go software on his 14-year-old stepdaughter's phone. "She took it off in half an hour," he says. He argues that while it's always good to be open about monitoring, a child deleting the profile can stoke conversation.
"For us, it's really important that kids don't feel like they're being stuck inside a prison cell," Mr. Memory says, "and that the social contract is enforced not by the app itself but by the parent and child."
But Mr. Gabel at Qustodio says he would prefer Apple allow parents to lock device management and VPN settings as part of the built-in restrictions. Apple declined to comment.
Spyware or Safety Net?
While no service I looked at offers a perfect solution, they do offer free trials. (For Circle Go, wait until the stand-alone service launches.) There are other tools out there that may tackle your specific concerns, so ask friends and family for recommendations, too. Just steer clear of services promising deeper iOS surveillance in exchange for your Apple iCloud login. Aside from the obvious security concern, they might not actually work as advertised.
Dr. Kazdin doesn't advocate any particular child-monitoring software, but he encourages keeping tabs on children...openly. That means getting their buy-in.
"You say, 'Here's the situation: I need to know what you're doing, and you need your freedom. Help me come up with something we agree on,' " Dr. Kazdin says. It's important to give children a feeling of choice, even if they don't really have one, he adds.
But he also warned there may not be an easy solution once bad behavior comes to light. "That's when you turn righteous, turn into a police officer," which won't help things, he says. "Punishment doesn't change behavior." That too, must be a negotiation: " 'If we find out you were doing this, what do you think would be a fair consequence?' "
Then Dr. Kazdin said the most consoling/frustrating thing: "The challenges for us as parents are like never before."
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 30, 2017 13:43 ET (17:43 GMT)