Manila Bulletin

Concerned About Your Kids’ Online Activities?

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BELLEVUE, Wash. — Parenting in the digital age is a huge challenge, but finally… there’s real help on the way. Today, the Un-carrier unveiled T-Mobile FamilyMode – a comprehens­ive digital solution that gives parents control over their kids’ online activities and screen time… on their phones and across the connected devices in their homes. Available June 29, T-Mobile FamilyMode is an app and device combo -- the app gives you control over your kids’ phones and TMobile FamilyMode Home Base connects to your home’s Wi-Fi, giving you the control you need over your other connected screens.

While the carriers’ solutions only cover the devices connected to their networks, T-Mobile FamilyMode lets you manage, monitor, filter and set time limits for your kids’ phones, tablets, gaming consoles, laptops, smart TVs and the other Wi-Ficonnecte­d devices in your home… and it’s just $20 out of pocket for the device and $10/mo for the T-Mobile FamilyMode app!

“Today’s parents face issues that simply didn’t exist 50 years ago – are their kids safe online? What sites are they visiting? Are they spending too much time on social media? What the hell is Fortnite? These are questions that parents of my generation didn’t have to answer,” said John Legere, CEO at T-Mobile. “The typical U.S. household has five connected devices – so why do the carriers’ solutions only give you control over phones and tablets? The Duopoly’s parental controls are like a blanket that doesn’t cover your feet. T-Mobile FamilyMode is true digital peace of mind in your pocket.”

American kids get their first phone at 10.3 1 years old, and parents estimate that their kids spend an average of 19 2 hours per week across their connected devices. But with each new screen comes additional concerns for parents -- 68% feel a lack of control over their kids’ online habits and 71% worry about kids’ screen time 3. WITH T-MOBILE FAMILYMODE, YOU CAN:

• Set daily internet limits on apps or platforms – Only give your child online access between 7pm and 8pm on school nights, for example. Or set a half hour screen time for Netflix to watch on your teen’s TV. You can even set bedtimes for each kid – now they’ve only got online access until a certain time of night.

• Choose which platforms, sites and apps to allow on phones and tablets – Younger kids not ready for social media? Turn off their access with one tap. Or pick and choose sites and apps to restrict – one kid’s ready for YouTube but another’s not? Control is in your hands.

• Instantly pause and resume mobile internet access – Asked the kids to do the dishes twice already, but the sink’s still full? Pause their devices easily! Last of the plates squarely put away in the cupboard? Resume!

• Filter out inappropri­ate content – Use customizab­le filters to allow or deny online access to certain sites and phone or tablet apps for each of your kids, like educationa­l apps or Minecraft for the younger kids…Twitch and Steam for the older ones.

• Reward your kids with bonus screen time – Kiddo snagged an A on their essay and didn’t complain about meatloaf night? Go ahead, give ‘em a little more time on their gaming console for Fortnite with a quick tap. • See where your kids spend their time online – See which apps and sites your kids use and even their internet search history.

• Know where your kids are – With real-time location informatio­n, you’ve got peace of mind because you can check in on where your kids are as long as they have their phone… anytime, from virtually anywhere.

The carriers’ so-called parental controls aren’t even in the same arena as T-Mobile FamilyMode. The Duopoly’s family controls won’t allow you to set time limits for specific apps, sites and platforms. None of the carriers’ solutions give you the level of detail TMobile does about your kids’ web, app and platform usage. None tell you how much time your kids spend online per app and category – like social media or gaming. And of course, none cover your kids’ Xbox, smart TVs, computers and other Wi-Fi devices.

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