For years, giving a child their first phone meant starting with a device designed for adults and then trying to lock it down afterward.
Apple just announced a major shift.
With iOS 27, kids' devices can start as a blank slate—no wide-open access, no endless game of chasing settings and blocking apps after the fact. Parents decide what gets added and when.
This is how child-safe technology should work: parental authority first, access second.
It's also a reminder that protecting kids online doesn't require invasive age-verification systems or sacrificing privacy. Good design can solve a lot of problems before lawmakers try to.
Apple deserves credit for raising the bar on both privacy and parental controls.
Would you feel more comfortable giving your child a phone if it started locked down by default?
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