Microguide

Smart Phones

Phones & Smartphone Safety focuses on the devices your family relies on most for communication, banking, authentication, social media, and access to online services. It helps reduce the risks associated with scams, account compromise, device loss, theft, and unnecessary privacy exposure while keeping security practical for everyday life.

For: Parents and carers
Free preview

What matters most

These are the areas that usually make the biggest difference in everyday household digital safety.

  • Your phone often protects access to everything elseFor many people, a smartphone now acts as the gateway to banking, email, social media, password managers, authentication apps, and account recovery. Understanding which accounts depend on the device, the phone number, or authentication apps on your phone help reduce the risk of account compromise and lock-out.
  • Physical security and device recovery matter more than most security appsA strong screen lock, verified backups, and enabled device recovery features such as Find My iPhone or Find My Device provide some of the most valuable protections if a phone is lost, stolen, damaged, or replaced.
  • Keeping the device updated significantly reduces riskMost successful phone compromises exploit vulnerabilities that have already been fixed. Keeping the operating system and apps updated remains one of the simplest and most effective security measures available.
  • App permissions and location sharing should be understoodMany apps request access to cameras, microphones, contacts, photos, and location data. The goal is not disabling everything, but understanding what information is being shared, with whom, and whether it remains appropriate.
  • Messaging remains one of the most common routes for scamsText messages, messaging apps, social platforms, and phone calls are frequently used for phishing, impersonation scams, fraud, and social engineering. Recognising suspicious requests often provides more protection than additional security software.
  • Smartphones are often the most personal device in the householdFor many adults and children, phones contain conversations, photos, friendships, entertainment, and aspects of personal identity. Open conversations about safety, privacy, and responsible use are usually more effective than relying entirely on restrictions or monitoring.
Full guide

What the full guide covers

The complete guide is designed to move from understanding the issue to applying realistic settings and routines.

What to keep in perspective

Context that helps you avoid overreacting, underreacting, or focusing on the wrong risks.

Sensible defaults

Practical starting settings and routines that work for most households.

What to watch for over time

Things that may need to be reviewed as devices, accounts, habits and family circumstances change.

Want help reviewing Smart Phone settings?

CyberSprouts can help you review communication, privacy and recovery settings across your family’s Smart Phones.

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