this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2025
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[–] Skullgrid@lemmy.world 32 points 3 days ago (14 children)

fellow tech dad here. how did you strike the balance between "look up shit online" and "hiding the terrors and lies of the internet from my kids"?

Mine's still little, but knowing sooner is better.

[–] SynopsisTantilize@lemm.ee 22 points 3 days ago (13 children)

I have the Microsoft safety shit on, and I made every site they can go to a web app. My router blocks nsfw/nonkid traffic. My phone gets notifications when they do anything at all.

And I have extensions blocking all nsfw sites just in case. And I've nuked the entry for any web browser on their start menu and task bars. Can't even scroll to find it. If you open it, it requires my admin PW, which is 14char #$@-123-ABC so good luck turds.

Steam is locked down in kid mode - also they just play Roblox or cool math games anyways lol. Steam has browser disabled.

Only things they have access to is Bing.com with their signed in kid account. And coolmathgames.com.

It took about a week on and off to setup and I just did the two laptops in tandem. Windows 11.

The family thing can be a pain, Microsoft has a lot of half baked ideas https://www.tomsguide.com/computing/how-to-set-up-parental-controls-on-a-windows-11-pc

[–] conditional_soup@lemm.ee 7 points 3 days ago (4 children)

Yeah, I found Microsoft family to be a pretty half-assed experience. The thing that seems to work best is the screen time management. I had planned to try and set up YouTube access via allow listing channels in a home Linux server, but it turns out that YouTube doesn't identify their videos by channel in the URL and I'd have to allowlist every single video for a given channel.

[–] jim3692 6 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

You could theoretically host a Piped API instance, and use it to get channel info. I guess you are already using your own SSL certificates, judging by what you are trying to accomplish.

This is the Piped org btw: https://github.com/TeamPiped

It is a YouTube frontend/proxy.

Edit: I made a post on Piped's community, so we can discuss it there: https://discuss.online/post/16448014

[–] conditional_soup@lemm.ee 2 points 3 days ago

I'm not a sysadmin, I'm a backend dev with enough network knowledge to be dangerous. I've set up exactly one super basic website, so I know some of this stuff, I just have to (and can and will) stumblefuck my way through it. This seems like a really great idea, I had no idea Piped could potentially handle that. I'm going to keep an eye on this, thanks!

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