Kids love the all-knowing Google but sometimes they can take a “wrong turn” on Google and end up in a dark part of the Internet where they shouldn’t be. Thankfully, Google has some parental control features that parents can implement to at least help reduce the volume of unsuitable content that ends up in search results. Let’s take a look at some Google parental controls that you can enable to help keep your curious kids from ending up on the wrong side of the tracks:

What Is Google SafeSearch?

Google SafeSearch is one of the primary parental control options offered by Google to help parents police search results. SafeSearch helps to filter explicit content out of search results. It is mainly designed to target sexually explicit material (images and videos) and not violent content. How to Enable Google SafeSearch: To turn on Google SafeSearch, visit http://www.google.com/preferences When you have successfully turned SafeSearch either on or off, you will receive a confirmation message in your browser. If you want to check the status of SafeSearch to see if your child has somehow disabled it, look at the top of any search results page in Google, you should see a message near the top of the screen that says that SafeSearch is locked. There are no guarantees that SafeSearch will block out all bad content, but it is at least better than not having it turned on. There is also nothing to prevent your child from using a different search engine to find bad content. Other search engines such as Yahoo, have their own SafeSearch-like features that you can enable as well. Check their support pages for information on their parental control offerings.

Enable SafeSearch on Mobile Devices.

In addition to your computer, you will probably also want to enable SafeSearch on any mobile device that your child uses regularly, such as your smartphone, iPod touch, or tablet. For instructions on how to enable SafeSearch on a variety of mobile devices check out Google’s SafeSearch Mobile support page. As we all know, kids are going to be kids and try to test their boundaries. We put up one roadblock and they go around it. It’s a constant cat and mouse game and there will always be some internet door that we as parents forget to lock, and that will be the one that the kids get through, but we do the best we can.