By
Karandeep Singh Oberoi
Published 6 hours ago
Karandeep Singh Oberoi is a Durham College Journalism and Mass Media graduate who joined the Android Police team in April 2024, after serving as a full-time News Writer at Canadian publication MobileSyrup.
Prior to joining Android Police, Oberoi worked on feature stories, reviews, evergreen articles, and focused on 'how-to' resources.
Additionally, he informed readers about the latest deals and discounts with quick hit pieces and buyer's guides for all occasions.
Oberoi lives in Toronto, Canada. When not working on a new story, he likes to hit the gym, play soccer (although he keeps calling it football for some reason🤔) and try out new restaurants in the Greater Toronto Area.
Sign in to your Android Police account
Add Us On
Summary
Generate a summary of this story
follow
Follow
followed
Followed
Like
Like
Thread
Log in
Here is a fact-based summary of the story contents:
Try something different:
Show me the facts
Explain it like I’m 5
Give me a lighthearted recap
The appearance of sensitive content on YouTube is a serious concern — one that Reddit users are always airing on the r/YouTube subreddit.
Sponsored blocks with sensitive content, bot profile pictures that mimic sexual content, obscene videos targeting children, and more are all concerns that YouTube has failed to address over the years, and that's precisely why parental controls are slowly becoming a critical necessity.
Related
YouTube: The AP guide to Google's video-sharing service
Master the world's largest video-sharing platform
Posts By Charnita FanceAccording to YouTube, when it spoke to parents and experts, it found three main areas of focus:
- Controls that help teach kids how to consume content responsibly, and options for parents to make the right choice for their family.
- Content that is age-appropriate and stricter policies and safeguards for younger audiences.
- The right experience for every age with a simpler account setup that includes built-in protections and makes it easier for parents to ensure their child is in the right YouTube experience.
With those focus areas in mind, YouTube is today rolling out new updates that will help parents tailor their family’s YouTube experience, with the headline feature being a Shorts feed limit.
The aim here is to help kids be intentional with their screen time. Parents can choose to lock the Shorts feed entirely, or give their kids up to 2 hours of daily Shorts-viewing time. The limiter also offers flexibility. Since it is easily adjustable, parents can quickly set the Shorts feed limit to zero when they want their teen to focus on homework, and "change it to 60 minutes during a long car trip to be entertained."
A smoother hand-off for multi-user devices
Credit: Google
Elsewhere, YouTube is also cleaning up its UI for multi-user households with teens.
Subscribe for deeper coverage of parental-control updates
Discover more in the newsletter: in-depth explanations and practical context on parental controls, platform safety, and family-focused features, plus coverage of related tech and policy shifts that affect kids’ online experiences. Subscribe By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.It's introducing a new streamlined account switcher interface that not only makes it easier to jump between accounts on a single device, but also makes it much easier to create a new supervised account, as seen in the short GIF above.
Follow Followed Like Share Facebook X WhatsApp Threads Bluesky LinkedIn Reddit Flipboard Copy link Email Close Trending Now
8 YouTube ad-skipping hacks I wish I knew before paying for Premium
How to see sensitive content on X
YouTube’s biggest redesign in years is coming to TVs