Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Phones
  4. Social Media
  5. News

WhatsApp’s new pre-teen accounts put parents in charge, not the algorithm

With parent-managed accounts rolling out now, WhatsApp lets guardians oversee contacts, groups, and privacy settings, while keeping all chats end-to-end encrypted.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Whatsapp new chat featured
Dimitri Karastelev / Unsplash

WhatsApp is rolling out parent-managed accounts for pre-teens, giving guardians full control over their child’s contacts and group chats, and how their privacy settings are configured, all managed from the parent’s own phone.

The feature targets families with children under 13. It’s WhatsApp’s clearest move yet to position itself as a safe messaging environment for younger users, at a time when pressure on tech platforms over child online safety has never been higher.

How parent-managed accounts actually work

Setup requires both phones in the same room. Parents link their own device to their child’s to connect the two accounts, and from that point, the parent is in charge. They decide who can send messages, which groups the child can join, and whether unknown contacts can reach them at all.

Every one of those settings is locked behind a parent PIN on the child’s device. A pre-teen can’t quietly undo restrictions without the parent noticing.

Privacy stays intact, even with parental oversight

WhatsApp is threading a real needle here. Individual conversations stay end-to-end encrypted, so parents can’t read what their child is actually saying. But they can monitor account activity, review incoming message requests from unknown contacts, and get notified when their child joins or leaves a group.

That’s a meaningful distinction, and one parents should understand before they set this up. You get visibility into who your kid is talking to. You don’t get a transcript.

When you can expect it on your phone

WhatsApp hasn’t committed to a firm launch date, confirming only that the feature is arriving gradually over the coming months. No regions were named as getting early access, and there’s no cost involved since WhatsApp remains free.

Recommended Videos

If you have a pre-teen and you’re already on WhatsApp, watch your app updates. WhatsApp says it will refine the feature based on feedback as it rolls out wider.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
AMD’s latest Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 pushes X3D to the limit
Dual 3D V-Cache, higher power, and a focus on enthusiast performance
AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 FEatured

AMD has unveiled what might be its most extreme desktop CPU yet, the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2. And it’s going all-in on one thing: cache.

https://twitter.com/jackhuynh/status/2037159705395491033?s=20

Read more
Next-gen AI breakthrough promises chatbots that can read the room better
Researchers are teaching AI chatbots to read between the lines
Generative AI

Have you ever asked a chatbot something and felt like it completely missed your point? You say something with a bit of nuance, and the AI misses the subtlety entirely. That is exactly the problem researchers are trying to solve.

Even though the emotional connection with AI can feel deeper than human conversation for many users, most AI systems today still treat a sentence as a single block of sentiment. If you mix praise and criticism, the nuance often gets lost.

Read more
ChatGPT is not getting an erotic mode, after all
OpenAI pulls back as “adult mode” runs into bigger concerns
ChatGPT-to-rollback-to-friendly-and-adulttt

If you were expecting ChatGPT to get an “erotic mode,” that idea is officially off the table. According to Financial Times, OpenAI’s spicy mode is on hold “indefinitely.”

Inside OpenAI's struggle to bring the adult mode to life

Read more