View Single Post
Old 29-07-2025, 10:20   #1223
tweetiepooh
Virgin Media Employee
 
tweetiepooh's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Winchester
Services: Staff MyRates BB: VM 1Gb TV: VM XL Phone : VM XL
Posts: 3,292
tweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appeal
tweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appealtweetiepooh has a bronzed appeal
Re: Online Safety Bill Etc

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris View Post
As of this evening, 5 of the top 10 are still VPNs.

https://appfigures.com/top-apps/imes...om/top-overall

Number 5 is Yoti, a digital ID app. But Proton VPN has knocked ChatGPT off the top spot.

Opera browser (with VPN) is in at number 16.
Why do you let the kids have the ability to install stuff (without your consent)? It is not difficult to lock down the phone before you give it to your kids, no purchasing, no installing, lock down some settings. You can get more or less draconian as they demonstrate their trustworthiness.
At home you set the internet to block porn or other topics, routers will often now have parental/access controls available.
Yes these do require parents to be parents, to take a little time to learn something but it's their kids they are wanting to protect.
__________________
I work for VMO2 but reply here in my own right. Any help or advice is made on a best-effort basis. No comments construe any obligation on VMO2 or its employees.
tweetiepooh is offline   Reply With Quote