New service gives parents control over kids’ mobile use
May 21st, 2012 - 6:58 pm ICT by IANSLondon, May 21 (IANS) A new mobile service will soon give parents control over their children’s cellphone use, whom they chat with or text and also allow them to switch off their phones, wherever they are.
Mobile phone company Bemilo is offering the service to parents worried about text bullying, sexting and the disruptive use of phones in schools. It will operate on Vodafone network.
Campaigners say the phone deal, which is intended for children between eight and 16, hands power back to parents. The move follows the Daily Mail’s campaign for internet service providers to protect children by automatically blocking access to pornographic content, with adults having to ‘opt in’ if they want to view sexual material.
Until now, any restrictions on children’s mobile phone use have had to be made using the parental control options on the handset itself, the Daily Mail reports.
Parents signed up to Bemilo’s system, however, can set restrictions for their child’s phone using a web page that only they can access. The site is linked directly to the phone’s SIM card, so if a child wants to add a friend as a contact they have to ask the parent, who can then use the website to decide whether or not to allow the change.
All messages that are sent and received by the child can be viewed by the parents by logging on to the site, even if the child deletes them from the phone. Parents can also set a timer so that the phone cannot be switched on during lessons or late at night, for example. However, calls to the parents’ phones can be made at all times.
Bemilo founder Simon Goff said: “Unlike an app, Bemilo’s SIM will work on any mobile device or tablet, and most importantly cannot be bypassed by the child.”
- 1 in 4 UK pupils admit swapping porn images of selves by text message - Mar 18, 2011
- How to handle cyber bullying, sexting - Aug 22, 2010
- New cell phone app identifies predatory adults posing as kids - Jan 25, 2011
- Mobile phones users prefer using handsets for net surfing to PCs - Sep 21, 2010
- Court relief for Matrix Cellular - Oct 28, 2011
- Vodafone launches mobile wi-fi device - Mar 14, 2011
- British kids call police after bullying on Facebook - Apr 13, 2012
- Subscribers happy post-mobile number portability launch - Jan 20, 2011
- Facebook, gadgets galore... Indian children take to 'multi-tasking' - Sep 26, 2010
- China to launch campaign against online porn - Feb 28, 2012
- BlackBerry standoff: Some questions and answers - Aug 22, 2010
- Court notice to Vodafone - Nov 17, 2011
- 'Concerned' UK dad develops world's first Facebook bully alert - Apr 08, 2011
- New phone app to identify potential paedophiles - Jan 25, 2011
- Qualcomm launches 3G radiophone project for children in India - Aug 31, 2011
Tags: adults, campaigners, control options, daily mail, goff, handset, internet service providers, mail reports, mobile device, mobile phone company, mobile phone use, mobile service, parental control, parents, pornographic content, s system, sexual material, sim card, timer, vodafone