Public Safety
Apple Unveils Expansive Child Safety Features and Redesigned Parental Controls at WWDC26
CUPERTINO, California — Tech giant Apple has announced a comprehensive suite of new and improved child safety features designed to give parents granular control over their children's digital experiences. Unveiled during the company's annual Worldwide Developers Conference keynote address, the structural updates arrive as families, educators, and lawmakers nationwide grapple with the mounting mental health and developmental impacts of screen dependency on young people.
Launching as part of Apple’s upcoming fall software updates, the new ecosystem centers on a foundational tool dubbed "Ask to Browse." Expanding on the existing "Ask to Buy" framework used for App Store downloads, "Ask to Browse" forces children utilizing Safari to submit an automated permission request to a parent's device before accessing any unapproved website.
Dr. Sumbul Ahmad Desai, Apple’s Vice President of Health, emphasized that the features were constructed to match varying developmental stages. She stated that the tools allow parents to gradually ease restrictions as children grow, ensuring kids experience only what parents think they are ready for.
Beyond web filtering, Apple is rolling out a fully redesigned Screen Time dashboard that introduces "Time Allowances." This upgraded management utility allows caregivers to allocate maximum daily limits for entire application categories—such as Social Media, Games, and Entertainment—rather than forcing them to micromanage individual apps.
Furthermore, the operating system update introduces more intuitive scheduling blocks, making it seamless for parents to restrict access to specific apps during dedicated time windows, such as school hours or family dinners. These protections build directly upon Apple’s recently deployed communication controls, which let parents dictate who their children can contact or receive calls from via Messages, FaceTime, and standard cellular channels.
The strategic rollout comes amid intense public and legal scrutiny facing major tech conglomerates. Over the past year, schools nationwide have implemented strict device bans in classrooms, while a landmark surgeon general advisory warned of the psychological harms of early screen exposure, urging parents to delay device handoffs as long as possible. Simultaneously, states have pushed legislation to mandate rigorous online age-verification measures—a movement Apple has actively lobbied against.
NBC News Chief Technology Analyst Joanna Stern highlighted that the integrated operating system controls serve as both a shield and a solution for the company. Stern noted that Apple is attempting to show that they are giving parents and users the exact controls they need to keep their kids safe at the operating system level.
Closing out the presentation, Craig Federighi, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Software Engineering, reiterated the platform's commitment to prioritizing family security. Federighi stated that Apple is giving parents powerful, easy-to-use tools to help manage what kids can see, who they can talk to, and when they have access.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 9, 2026


