Set the rule once. Honored on every app.
One limit, set once — kept in sync across every app and device your child already uses.
You set up Netflix. Then Roblox. Then TikTok. Then you give up.
The average kid moves through seven apps a day — each with its own parent dashboard, its own bedtime toggle, its own idea of what counts as age-appropriate. You can't hold all of that in your head, so most parents get the first two set up and stop. That gap between “what I meant” and “what's actually enforced” is exactly where a kid finds the way around it first.
Phosra closes the gap by making your choice the thing that travels — not a setting you have to re-enter on every screen. Decide once; it holds everywhere.
Three steps. Then you stop thinking about it.
No new app for your child to resent and no spyware reading their messages. You set the intent; Phosra translates it into each platform's own controls and keeps them in step as your child grows.
Tell Phosra your child’s age
That's the whole setup. From your child's age, Phosra builds a sensible starting rule set across all 115 policy categories — content ratings, screen time, web filtering, ad and data limits — drawn from the OCSS rule registry rather than one company's house opinion. You stay in charge: loosen or tighten anything, anytime. Phosra just gives you a real starting point instead of a hundred blank toggles.
Connect the apps you actually use
One-tap connect for the apps and devices already in your house — streaming, games, chat, the App Store, iOS Screen Time, your home router. Phosra reads each one's native controls so your rule shows up as their setting, not a separate wall your child runs into.
Adjust once, honored everywhere
Push bedtime an hour later for the weekend? Allow Roblox on Saturdays only? Change it once in Phosra and every connected app updates on its own — usually within seconds. No more opening eight settings screens to make one decision.
“Move Emma’s bedtime to 9:30 on weekends.”
One sentence from you. Phosra updates the Netflix viewing window, the Roblox session cap, YouTube watch time, iOS Screen Time downtime, and the home-router curfew — without you opening a single one of them. The work of keeping eight apps in agreement is the part Phosra does so you don't have to.
Illustrative — exact surfaces depend on which apps you've connected.
The network can't read what your child does.
Phosra carries a small instruction — “this person is a 9-year-old, apply these rules” — to the apps that need it. It does notread your child's messages, watch history, game chats, or browsing. Think of it like the post office: it moves a sealed envelope to the right door, but it never opens the letter inside.
That isn't a promise we ask you to take on faith — it's how the system is built. The contents are locked to the app they're meant for, so even the network moving your rule around can't see what your child is actually doing. We also never sell, rent, or broker a child's data, and never use it for advertising.
The everyday stuff that actually changes.
Bedtimes that actually stick
When 9pm hits, new sessions stop across YouTube, TikTok, Discord, and games — not just on the one iPad you remembered to lock. The cutoff holds on every device at once, so “just five more minutes” doesn't become an hour on a different screen.
Grows up as your kid does
The rules that fit an 8-year-old aren't the rules for a 13-year-old. Phosra starts each child at an age-appropriate baseline and loosens as they get older — so you're adjusting one or two things, not rebuilding everything from scratch each birthday.
Built by parents who needed it
Phosra started because we were drowning in the same eight dashboards you are. It's free for families because that's the part that should never have a price — we earn our keep when developers and platforms build on the same open standard underneath.
Your child’s life stays theirs
You're setting boundaries, not installing surveillance. Phosra moves your rules without reading your child's conversations or watch history — the trust between you and your kid is the thing we're trying to protect, not spend.
One choice, honored the same way everywhere.
The reason your rule means the same thing on Roblox as it does on the App Store is that Phosra speaks a shared, open language for child-safety rules — built in the open so no single company gets to quietly redefine what “safe for a 9-year-old” means. Phosra is a builder on that standard, not its owner.
That standard is OCSS, the Open Child Safety Specification. It's still pre-release — an early IETF Internet-Draft, not a ratified, government-blessed rule — and we're honest about that. Phosra is working toward being OCSS Certified: a status earned from the standard, never a badge we hand ourselves. You can read the whole thing at openchildsafety.com.
Counts are live from the OCSS rule registry and the statute registry.
Set the rules once. We'll carry the rest.
Up to 5 children, all 115 policy categories, and every app you connect — included on the family plan, with no card on file. We make money when developers and platforms build on the standard underneath, never by selling your child's data.
Curious how it works underneath? Read the open standard at openchildsafety.com.