Bark and Bark mobile is just one of many parental control apps that can help keep kids safe online. Let’s see how it fares under rigorous testing.
Bark: Short Review
Where Bark shines is in its advanced content filtering features. For more than 30+ social media and apps, Bark monitors content sent or received (depending on the app) and flags potentially harmful content. Parents can determine what types of content are filtered such as depressive texts or sexually explicit messages. However, Bark doesn’t have advanced location tracking services, like geofencing, which lets parents know when their child has entered or exited a specific location. Bark is only available in three languages, which is less than some other parental control software competitors. To learn more about Bark’s features, click on the button below.
Bark’s Specifications
Bark subscriptions come in two tiers:
Bark Jr., which is priced at $49/month (billed annually) and is recommended for parents with younger kids who aren’t using many apps yet Bark Premium, which is priced at $99/month (billed annually) and which monitors more apps and websites, making it ideal for kids or teens who use multiple devices, sites, or social media apps
Features and Effectiveness: How Well Does Bark Mobile Perform?
Bark’s filtering features are very sensitive and caught everything we threw at it, including mature web searches or concerning keywords on social media sites. Alerts also come through fairly quickly, but its location services could be improved. All in all, we gave Bark an effectiveness rating of 8. Many online Bark user reviews (mostly kids and teens) claim that the software slows down apps. However, we didn’t notice any app or device speed changes during our test period. This, of course, depends on the device’s age and the number of apps being used and monitored.
Content filters
Right now, Bark monitors 32 apps, games, email accounts, and internet browsers like Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok. When any of your child’s activity or content is flagged, you get an alert. Bark parental control software is highly sensitive — even a beer mug emoji in a text message can set off alerts. For example, if your child texts their friends and says, “I’m really depressed,” you’ll know about it. Bark can do this with algorithms and machine learning technology that use contextual clues and natural language processes. There are more than a dozen sensitivity categories including:
Violence Depression Hate speech Drugs/alcohol Sexually explicit content
You can choose to flag “all” or “none” of the content within those categories in your account settings. Bark also monitors web browser activity, including private mode on browsers including Chrome, Firefox, or Microsoft Edge. There are limitations depending on which device you use, however. For example, Bark only monitors Chrome on iOS devices. Bark can also block web browsing, search terms, and access to email. We found email monitoring in particular to be reliable. Bark reviews incoming and outgoing emails in addition to email attachments. You can see flagged content quickly from your parent dashboard.
Social media monitoring
However, when it comes to social media apps, monitoring capabilities are limited. For example, Bark can only monitor posts on your child’s Facebook timeline. It can’t see what they’re searching for or what they are posting on other people’s timelines. As for Instagram, Bark monitors your child’s posts, but monitoring direct messages depends on your device. Bark can’t monitor DMs on iOS devices but can on Android. This is because those social media companies have not yet agreed to work with Bark to allow more comprehensive monitoring. The point is: a lot can slip by under Bark’s radar on some of the world’s most popular apps. However, for the apps it can monitor, it catches a lot of potential red flags.
Alert speeds
If you’re looking for real-time alerts, you won’t find that on every app with Bark monitoring. In our test, Twitter messages sent at 5:00 pm that were flagged for sexual content didn’t show up in alerts until 8:38 am the following morning. Other notifications, on Spotify for example, came through within 15 minutes. On average, most alerts came through on Apple and Android devices within 15 minutes.
Limited location services
When you download the Bark mobile app on your child’s device, it lets you know when your kid has arrived at a location. You’ll receive a message that they’ve made it and can even get directions straight to your child’s location. However, there are no advanced location services or geofencing options that other parental control apps have like, Qustodio.
Ease of Use: How User-Friendly is Bark?
Even though installation is time-consuming, you really only have to go through the process once for most apps. Because Bark’s interfaces are very user-friendly and consistent and because there are so many high-quality resources readily available on the website, we rank Bark an 8 for ease of use.
Bark’s website
Bark’s website is very user-friendly and easy to navigate. Once you log in for the first time, you’re prompted with a setup checklist on the Dashboard. Scroll down to see alerts that need your review. The website is clean and uncluttered and easily directs you to the next step in your process. The only other tab at the top is “Alerts.” Here, you can scroll through a list of alerts, which device they occurred on, and for which child. Under your profile tab, there are basic sections like Settings and the Help Center. However, one of our favorite parts about Bark is the high-quality parent resources, video tutorials, and conversation starters available for parents. You can learn great tips on how to talk to your kids or watch simple how-to videos. It’s a simple and very informative website.
Installation with Bark and Bark mobile
Setting up Bark monitoring on your family’s devices will require a time investment. Depending on how many kids you have + number of devices + type and number of apps, browsers, or email, you might be looking at a few hours all-in-all to connect all mobile phones, tablets, and computers. To connect each app, Bark estimates it will take you one minute. Based on our experience, it’s more like 3-5 minutes per task, especially if you don’t have passwords saved or need to log into apps on multiple devices. Just to get the Bark desktop app, it took 45 minutes to download, install, and then connect to an Apple smartphone. As such, you may want to grab a cup of coffee and block out some time in your calendar. When we connected Bark mobile to the iOS device, it took around 2 minutes to note apps (like Gmail, Spotify, and YouTube) that are installed but weren’t yet being monitored by Bark. This made it really easy to see what apps we still needed to connect.
Restrictions and conflicts with other software
One of our testers already had Google’s free parental control software, Family Link, installed on their devices. Because Bark requires you to connect to mobile phones via their website and not the app store, Family Link blocked it. Eventually, we got around it, but it wasn’t easy. Some apps, like Instagram, require parents to reauthorize their account on Bark every 60 days. This can get tedious depending on how many kids or apps you are trying to monitor. If you are regularly updating apps and resetting passwords for privacy, you will have to log back into them on Bark. It’s not a “set it and forget it” monitoring app. Additionally, when we tried to connect to Instagram via an Apple phone, we got a “URL not found” notification. We reached out to customer service representatives via the contact form (they don’t have a number to call) and received a response from one of their customer service representatives within an hour. They suggested connecting the app using a web browser. When we set Instagram up through a browser instead of the app, we were successful. Additionally, certain email browsers have different security policies. That means that connection to your child’s Yahoo or AOL will have a different set of directions. In general, you just have to take the process app by app and anticipate a few road bumps along the way. On the plus side, Bark offers a lot of visual guides and even has options for you to schedule a one-on-one phone call to get your devices set up. So while it may not be the fastest process, the steps are clear, and there is plenty of help available.
Using the app
The app interface is nearly identical to the website, just optimized for a mobile screen. This means you don’t have to learn two interfaces, which is always good news. Click on “More” at the bottom of your dashboard to see your settings and profile information. Again, it’s identical to the site. Clean, effective, and anything you can do on the desktop, you can do on the app, including changing settings and alert features.
Customer service
We tried to schedule a call for help with an iOS device set up, but there was a two-week wait — yikes! Instead, we submitted a help ticket and had someone reach out to us via email within an hour. With that, our problem was solved in minutes. If you prefer talking on the phone, you’ll have to schedule a time because there’s no number on their website. Overall, our email help tech was responsive and helpful, and all our questions were answered.
Data Privacy: How Does Bark Use Your Data?
We have to say, Bark really cares about your privacy. Not only do you own all your family’s data, but all of your information is also encrypted and then removed after 30 days. You can request for your data to be removed from their servers sooner than 30 days. What does all that mean? It means Bark goes beyond what is legally required of them to protect your data and they have incorporated multiple layers of security to keep hackers out. All these features make Bark a privacy-focused app and earns it a score of 9 out of 10.
Data privacy
Here’s how Bark keeps your data safe according to its privacy policy: Additionally, Bark’s alerts only include pieces of conversations — the things “you need to know” according to Bark. The goal is to keep a level of privacy for other people your child is communicating with. For us, this is a clear indication that Bark respects an individual’s right to privacy.
Device privacy
In addition to keeping your data secure, Bark also ensures that your device’s warranty and terms of service is uncompromised. Bark does not require parent or child devices to be rooted (Android) or jailbroken (iOS). There’s also no need to buy new devices and match operating systems. Even if you’re using an Android phone, you can still monitor your child’s iPhone or iPad and vice versa.
What Does Bark Mobile Monitor?
Read our comprehensive charts to see what emails, browsers, and apps Bark can connect with on your devices. If you want to know the specifics of what Bark monitors on each app (like images, messages, videos, comments, etc.), you can read more on Bark by clicking on your device and then the app you want to learn more about.
General Functions Chart
Here you’ll find which general functions Bark can monitor.
Email Chart
Here you’ll find which email services Bark can monitor.
Apps Chart
Here you’ll find which apps Bark can monitor.
Browser Chart
Here you’ll find which browsers Bark can monitor.
Keeping Kids Safe Online with Bark and Bark Mobile
Bark is not a replacement for in-app privacy settings because Bark can’t monitor everything across your child’s apps or devices. However, most social media apps don’t have Bark’s high level of sensitivity when it comes to content monitoring, so it’s not a bad idea to pair the two together. Bark is definitely an investment of your time upfront, but once apps and devices are connected, you’ll get alerts quickly and features like web filtering, text monitoring, and social media monitoring. For the price, parents get a user-friendly and advanced parental control software so we give it an overall ranking of 8 out of 10. If you’re interested in hands-on experience with Bark mobile, click the button below. For more information on how to make sure kids stay safe online, check out the following resources:
Norton Family Review: Will It Keep Your Family Safe? Kaspersky Safe Kids Review: Affordable Parental Control A Parent’s Guide to Stop and Prevent Cyberbullying How to Keep Social Media for Kids Fun and Safe Profanity Filters: Everything You Need to Know
Using machine learning technology and algorithms, Bark flags content or activity that could be potentially harmful. Parents receive alerts via email to text and can review them in full detail on their parent dashboard. If log-in information is shared between parents and kids, kids could easily change app passwords and lock parents out of accounts. Parents will get a notification that the password was changed, but they can’t stop it from happening unless they are the only one with the password. There are also more advanced ways to get around parental control software like proxy sites (which hide IP addresses) that some kids may be aware of.