Alt text:Family Link set up on Mobile
YouTube’s Ongoing Commitment to Kids and Teens
Last year, we announced a new teen supervised experience, shaped by a nuanced understanding of how the online behaviour of young people changes as they grow older. This builds on the other experiences we have for younger people, such as YouTube Kids and supervised experiences for pre-teens, designed to be safer spaces for young explorers, while empowering parents with intuitive tools to tailor the experience for their family's unique needs.
We aim to create great experiences for young people, which is why their privacy, safety, wellbeing and mental health is at the core of our service and policy development. All our work in this area is underpinned by a set of five principles when building services and features for kids and teens.
Additional Safeguards for Younger Users: We're building a digital environment where curiosity can flourish without constant worry. This means defaulting uploads to private, making default digital wellbeing protections like our Take a Break and Bedtime reminders more prominent, blocking personalised ad targeting and restricting sensitive ad content and categories, and limiting repeated recommendations of videos related to certain sensitive categories for teens. These aren't just technical account-level settings; they're our commitment to helping your child build healthy digital habits and feel secure exploring their interests.
A Library of Free, High-Quality Content: We take pride in the healthy and diverse creator ecosystem in New Zealand, with local creators producing high-quality content that reach young people all around the world. Kids content creators like TV personality Suzy Cato on TreehutTV entertain and educate through their catchy songs and fun videos, while education creators like Subash Chandar K have supported many young people in their home learning, and channels like Kea Kids News leverage YouTube to deliver high quality news content for the younger audience.
Leveraging Insights of Cross-Industry Experts: Beyond our close collaboration with the Youth and Families Advisory Council, we collaborate with third-party experts to create a parents’ guide for quality online time and a set of quality principles for kids and family content. We’re committed to positively shaping young users' online experiences by promoting healthy, enriching content that supports media literacy, digital citizenship, and learning while actively limiting low-quality content, for example, through the YouTube Digital Wellbeing Initiative. We're also collaborating with organisations like the World Health Organization (WHO) and Common Sense Networks to develop public, industry-wide educational resources related to teens and online wellbeing.
We're not just building platforms; we're building a future where young people can explore the online world with confidence, creativity, and a sense of wonder. This is an ongoing journey, and we're committed to continuously listening, learning, and improving to make Google and YouTube the best they can be for young people everywhere.