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Family Internet Safety - Bastet Home Blog
Practical advice on parental controls, home network filtering, and keeping children safe online. From the team at Bastet Home.
Parental Controls That Actually Work on Games Consoles
15 May 2026
Games consoles are where most parental control strategies fall apart.
Parents install parental control apps on phones and tablets, set up screen time limits on laptops, and feel reasonably well covered. Then they discover that the PlayStation in the living room, the Xbox in the bedroom, or the Nintendo Switch in their child’s bag connects freely to the internet with no restrictions whatsoever.
This is not an oversight. It reflects a fundamental limitation of device-based parental controls.
How Children Bypass Parental Controls - And How to Stop Them
8 May 2026
Most parental control tools are defeated by motivated teenagers within a few days of installation. This is not a flaw in any particular product - it is a structural weakness in how most parental controls are designed.
Understanding the common bypass techniques helps parents choose tools that actually work.
Uninstalling the app
The simplest bypass. If a parental control app can be removed from a device, a child who knows the device passcode will eventually remove it. Some apps protect themselves against this by requiring a parent password to uninstall - but many do not, and even those that do can be defeated by a factory reset.
Why App-Based Parental Controls Fail (And What to Do Instead)
1 May 2026
App-based parental controls are the obvious first choice for most parents. You install an app on your child’s phone, set some limits, and assume you are done. For young children, this works reasonably well. But as children get older and more technically curious, these tools fall apart - often in ways parents do not notice until much later.
The fundamental problem: one device, one app
Every app-based parental control product shares the same weakness: it only controls the device it is installed on.
