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Addicted to Your iPhone? Apple Screen Time Will Tell You

At WWDC, Apple announced a new set of features for monitoring and controlling your (and your children's) phone usage, coming in iOS 12 this fall.

 & Ben Moore Managing Editor, Software

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Apple today unveiled new features coming in iOS 12 that are intended to protect its users' digital wellbeing.

In addition to new ways to group notifications, Apple's big announcement at its annual World Wide Developer's Conference (WWDC) was a monitoring app called Screen Time, which helps you keep track of and control device and app usage.

With Screen Time, users can view detailed Activity Reports (on a daily or weekly basis) on individual app usage, as well as more general information, such as the number of notifications received and the number of times a device was activated. Based on this data, individuals can set up time restrictions for specific apps, websites, or categories of apps.

More importantly, parents can access the same usage statistics for their children. Screen Time is account-based, so it will keep track of a child's activity across all iOS devices. Screen Time's scheduling feature will also allow parents to completely block their children from using their device for specific periods of time (like bedtime) or limit usage to just a handful of pre-approved ones, such as the Phone.

With these latest announcements, Apple now offers a native set of parental control features competitive with many paid alternatives. Before this announcement, iOS already featured web filtering, app-blocking, and age-restriction capabilities. But third-party parental control apps tend to falter on iOS devices since Apple limits the device settings these apps can access, which is one advantage of Apple's built-in tools.

Many parental control services require parents to install a Mobile Device Management (MDM) profile on their child's device to enact any policies at all. The problem with this setup is that children can easily remove this profile (since it can't be password-protected) and that these apps do not offer the same amount of control over the device.

The features in iOS 12, then, should appeal to parents, especially at a time when tech addiction is becoming a more widely discussed topic for both adults and kids. Google recently announced its own efforts to curtail excessive device use, and offers an app for basic parental control functions, called Family Link. Still, you may prefer to use the same service across all of your children's devices, including mobile and desktop platforms, in which case you should check out our roundup of the best parental control services.

About Our Expert

Ben Moore

Ben Moore

Managing Editor, Software

My Experience

I’ve been writing and editing technology articles for more than seven years, most recently as part of PCMag's software team. I am responsible for content in the AI, financial, graphic design, operating system, photo and video editing, productivity, and small business categories, among others. I also worked for several years on the consumer electronics team, where I edited articles on topics such as cameras, headphones, phones, speakers, and tablets. Before PCMag, I was at Neowin.net, Tom’s Guide, and Laptop Mag.

The Technology I Use

I use a Lenovo ThinkPad P14s for work and a 2021 Razer Blade 14 for everything else. I also keep a Lenovo Yoga Tab tablet and a HiBy M300 digital audio player. My current phone is a Google Pixel 9a.

As for software, I use Firefox everywhere, as well as Bitwarden and Mullvad VPN. I rely on Adobe Lightroom to edit photos and Google Keep or Microsoft Excel to manage the rest of my life. To organize my music library, I use MusicBee on Windows and Musicolet on Android.

I’m currently split between wired and wireless headphones. I use a Fiio K3 amp/DAC for the Beyerdynamic DT 700 Pro X headphones and the Moondrop Kato earphones. For wireless audio, I switch between the Shure Aonic 50 (Gen 2) headphones and the Technics EAH-AZ40M2 earphones.

My current camera is a Nikon Z6III.

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