Meta Introduces New Parental Control for Families to Build Positive Online Habits

  • Meta introduced Family Center, a new place for parents and guardians to access supervision tools and resources from leading experts. Supervision tools are available on Instagram, and will begin rolling out in VR in May.
  • This is the first step in a longer term journey to develop intuitive supervision tools, informed by experts, teens and parents.
  • Family Center will eventually allow parents and guardians to help their teens manage experiences across Meta technologies, all from one central place.

Meta is making supervision tools available in their new Family Center. Working on it closely with experts, parents, guardians and teens to develop Family Center, a new place for parents to oversee their teens’ accounts within Meta technologies, set up and use supervision tools, and access resources on how to communicate with their teens about internet use.

This is just one step on a longer path — the vision for Family Center is to eventually allow parents and guardians to help their teens manage experiences across Meta technologies, all from one central place.

An Education Hub for Parents and Guardians

Family Center includes a new education hub where parents and guardians can access resources from experts and review helpful articles, videos and tips on topics like how to talk to teens about social media. Parents can also watch video tutorials on how to use the new supervision tools available on Instagram today. Developed closely with groups like Connect Safely and Net Family News to develop these resources.

New Supervision Tools on Instagram

Supervision tools on Instagram are available in the US today, with plans to roll out globally in the coming months. The first set of parental supervision tools on Instagram will allow parents and guardians to:

  • View how much time their teens spend on Instagram and set time limits.
  • Be notified when their teen shares they’ve reported someone.
  • View and receive updates on what accounts their teens follow and the accounts that follow their teens.

Learn more about how to set up supervision on Instagram. Teens will need to initiate supervision for now in the app on mobile devices, and the option for parents to initiate supervision in the app and on desktop will be added in June. Teens will need to approve parental supervision if their parent or guardian requests it.

Over the next few months Meta will add additional features, including letting parents set the hours during which their teen can use Instagram and the ability for more than one parent to supervise a teen’s account.

VR Parental Supervision Tools

Meta is also announcing VR parental supervision tools that will roll out to Quest in the coming months. As a first step to giving people more customized control over their VR experience, with expanding the functionality of the existing unlock pattern on Quest headsets, starting in April. This will allow parents to prevent teens 13+ from accessing experiences they feel aren’t age-appropriate by using an Unlock Pattern to lock access to those apps.

In May, teens 13+ will be automatically blocked from downloading IARC rated age-inappropriate apps. While also launching a Parent Dashboard, hosting a suite of supervision tools that will link to the teen’s account based on consent from both sides.

Parents can incorporate their feedback through the Trust, Transparency and Control (TTC) Labs and Meta's global co-design program — a multidisciplinary research program that engages and empowers young people, parents, guardians and experts to collaborate with the product design process. By using insights from this program to build supervision tools, and to introduce more features for families over time.

“The co-design process has clearly shown that teens like to be able to call on their parents for support and guidance, but often don’t know where or how to begin. By proposing parental supervision tools across apps, Meta will help overcome this hurdle. Especially since the tools are unobtrusive, respectful of privacy, and offer the ideal training wheels for younger teens building their competence and confidence in the online social environment.”

Janice Richardson, International Advisor at Insights SA

“Encouraging informed parental engagement in their children’s digital presence is an important way to support young people’s wellness online. Parents can model and mentor the use of these powerful tools for their children, engaging in these spaces alongside their children to provide opportunities for learning. Parents can support and monitor their children’s gradual increase in independence as they demonstrate responsible and safe use, with respect for others and for themselves. By engaging parents as co-learners with their children, we can support their parenting in the digital ecosystem in ways consistent with their parenting in the physical world, setting their children up for long-term physical, mental, and social wellness.”

Dr. Michael Rich, Director and Founder at Boston Children’s Hospital’s Digital Wellness Lab

“We’re happy to see the new tools Meta is launching to support parents in helping their children navigate the various social apps. Our research shows that regular parental supervision and co-participation is the best way to inoculate kids from the worst aspects of the internet. We’re hopeful that parents will take advantage of these new resources, and will continue to collaborate with Meta in their efforts to make their products safer and more enjoyable for families.”

Justin Patchin, Co-founder and Co-director at Cyberbullying Research Center

News Source: Meta Newsroom