Updated
Updated · WIRED · Jul 4
Apple's iOS 17 Assistive Access Turns iPhone 13 Into 6-App Kids Phone
Updated
Updated · WIRED · Jul 4

Apple's iOS 17 Assistive Access Turns iPhone 13 Into 6-App Kids Phone

3 articles · Updated · WIRED · Jul 4

Summary

  • A used iPhone 13 was locked into a six-app setup—Calls, Messages, Maps, Camera, Photos and Music—using Apple's Assistive Access, creating a child-safe phone without extra software or fees.
  • Introduced in iOS 17 for users with cognitive disabilities, the mode lets caregivers whitelist apps and contacts, block Safari and other browsers entirely, and render message links as plain text.
  • That closes loopholes the author found in standard Screen Time controls, which can be bypassed through shared links; Apple is also adding Safari removal to revamped Screen Time in iOS 27 this September.
  • Limits remain: Assistive Access can run sluggishly, overrides Screen Time limits, requires exiting the mode to power off the phone, and the Messages app froze once during heavy emoji searching.
  • The setup points to an underpublicized Apple feature that can repurpose older iPhones as tightly controlled starter phones while preserving navigation, FaceTime and Find My tracking.

Insights

Apple has a free 'kid-safe' phone solution it doesn't advertise. Why is it being kept a secret?
By locking down a child's first phone, are parents preventing them from learning crucial digital survival skills?
When a disability feature becomes a parenting hack, who might unintentionally be left behind?