As far as protection for your kid’s devices go, you can protect one device for free (Mac, Windows, iOS, Kindle or Android). In fact, as a parent, you can install Qustodio on as many parent devices as you want. True to Qustodio form, the new Qustodio Parent’s app is free. Our goal is to make Qustodio the most useful and recommended by parents all over the world. We’ll be rolling out many improvements and changes to the app all during the year. This is just the start of what we’ve got planned for you in 2017. But, to make things easier, we’ve added an auto-login feature to do this automatically for you. It’s still very much a version 1.0 and for now, you’ll still have go to our desktop Family Portal change rules and settings. Think of the Qustodio Parent’s App as a much simpler version of Qustodio. You can scroll down to view historical activity or you you can just pull to refresh the timeline to get the latest updates. You’ll see the games, apps and websites they surf and, if your child’s device allows it, you’ll also be one click away from viewing their latest location updates. When you click on each child, you’ll see their screen time use for that day and a timeline with all their activity. Once the Parent’s App opens, you’ll see the list of all the kids you have protected with Qustodio. During installation we’ll ask you a simple question: “Is this a Parent’s device?” Just answer yes, and the Qustodio Parent’s App will start. To install, just download the Qustodio app to your own iPhone or Android. Today, we’re taking that step with the launch of the latest version of the Qustodio app, which features a brand new experience for parents on mobile. We’ve long wanted to bring that experience to mobile in order to make things easier for you. It is second to none in the way it summarizes screen time, app usage and content browsed. This is great because kids and other users can actually log into that same web browser with their credentials and do their thing while not upsetting the parental controls established by Mom and Dad.If you’ve ever used Qustodio before, you know that core of our product experience for parents is the reporting we do of kids’ activities on your Qustodio desktop Family Portal dashboard. Now both are locked down, and they require the parent's login to remove the locks/restrictions. In the page that appears, enable SafeSearch Filtering and click the Lock option. Then in the google search window at the bottom right, enter Settings. Then return to the bottom of the page and hit the X to conceal those settings.įor Google Search (both image and regular search), I have the parent log in at the top right corner. Then log out of Youtube at the top where they log in. Then go into the restricted mode for Youtube (at bottom of the first page) and set it up. To handle Youtube, I have them log in with their parental accounts. That said, I use Qustodio with many of my clients. I've informed Qustodio CS of this issue.įirst, any kid that wants to get around our blocks will do so, but no reason to make it easy for them. I made Windows 'prefer IPv4 addresses' by running the script MS provides here (it makes changes to your registry I think): įor some reason, Qustodio will not filter IPv6 addressed traffic on my machines, which is what the google sites were using by default. So I'd like to dive deeper into the socket/proxy states to find where Qustodio does its magic and maybe find out how youtube is getting around that.Ĭan anyone tell me how to find Qustodio's interception point, or what tools might help me see how urls are intercepted by Qustodio? In both situations Youtube still gets through. The only dent I've made is that when fiddler's proxy/sniffer is running, some other https sites on my ban list (eg ) can be reached, while they are properly blocked when fiddler is off. In my research to solve this, I've watched my net traffic in Fiddler, learned about proxying, and even disabled QUIC mode in Chrome. Qustodio CS has fallen back to the 'turn off your firewall and virus checkers' canard and that hasn't fixed it. All other websites, both open and https are handled/blocked by Qustodio just like they should. Neither an explicit youtube rule, or time limits, or category method seems to stop chrome or edge from loading and its videos. Win10: I've been limiting my kid's computer time using Qustodio mostly successfully for the past several months.
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