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Kiddie Parental Control

Kiddie Parental Control helps you to protect your children by securing his phone or tablet and add restriction...

Free

Store review

Kiddie Parental Control helps you to protect your children by securing his phone or tablet and add restrictions.

Features

Kiddie needs to be directly installed on your child's device and its access is secured with a code.

As a parent, you'll be able to:

• avoid installing new application by blocking the Play Store
• block the installed applications (completely or by adding a time limit)
• limit the calls duration
• ensure the Youtube parental filter is enabled (and stays enabled)
• track your child applications or network activities
• be warned when your child leave a defined area (PAID FEATURE)
• block undesired content (adult/illegal websites...) or a specific website by filtering the device's network requests (PAID FEATURE)

Beware of one thing: Kiddie does not provide any remote control. You need a physical access to the device to do restriction modifications.

Security

Kiddie is protected by a security code that you'll have to define at first launch. Of course, Kiddie will try to block all other possible ways to disable or uninstall the restrictions (notably some system settings). This app uses the Device Administrator permission when possible in order to be sure your child will not be able to uninstall Kiddie.

Forgetting the security code may avoid the device to come back to a normal state. Kiddie is not responsible for the consequences of the security code loss.

Privacy Policy

Contrary to several other solutions, Kiddie do almost everything on your child's device. This is great for privacy, but this has one drawback: as a parent, you can't control your child's device remotely.

By default, Kiddie does not use Internet and does not send any data. However, if you purchased and enabled the network filtering feature, Kiddie will send the hostnames of internet requests (e.g. "google.com") in order to be able to recognize the harmful websites. This data is anonymous and send over the secure HTTPS protocol.

Last update

April 13, 2020

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