this post was submitted on 10 May 2026
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Say you were a guardian or parent and get to decide when a child can get a phone or use a computer and get internet with it. If you wish you can also install software and change router settings to what you see fit.

Some parents decide to forbid the internet completely, others are more relaxed. Some go the helicopter route, and some do not care whatsoever what their kid does online.

What is your policy on letting a child use the internet?

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[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 points 1 day ago (2 children)

It only sounds draconian compared to the completely unsupervised access that I think most of us grew up with.

I had porn at 13. Shock videos shortly after. 4chan at 16. Outside of being able to discover my own media tastes through piracy and late night binges, I struggle to identify a lot of good that came of my unfettered access.

[–] semperverus@lemmy.world 2 points 17 hours ago

This was my exact experience and the exact same reason I won't be repeating it for my family moving forward.

[–] Axiochus@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I totally agree, and I've had the same experience. I just don't think that it needs to be a choice between free roaming Wild West tiktok brainrot and some sort of panopticon. I believe that the internet is a legitimate space for learning, discovery, socialisation. I get the many many dangers, but I don't think that prison rules will produce good netizens.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 day ago

I agree, but I think there's less spaces for that then there used to be, and I don't think 13 is a particularly unreasonable age for access to still be restricted. It's probably the older end of when I'd be trying to teach a kid proper online safety and behavior before starting to loosen the reins, but every kid is going to be different. Some would be ready earlier, and others later.

I think we just disagree on where the middle ground might lie, which is probably to be expected on complicated topics like this. Everyone's going to have their own take.

I definitely wouldn't be comfortable tossing a hypothetical kid into the deep end, so to speak, at 13.

On top of that, kids are resourceful with a ton of time on their hands. Sufficiently motivated kids will find ways around restrictions (I sure did, locked doors without a deadbolt are not a real lockdown, lol) or friends with less restrictions anyway, and there's some value to allowing them to think they're getting away with things and navigating on their own, regardless of whether I as a parent would really be aware of it or not.