Logy: calm parental controls without fear or spying

The parental-control market has been stuck in the same bad habit for years: selling anxiety instead of a product. The scarier the headline, the easier it is to get a click on “Start a subscription.” Logy takes a different route. We build a service that helps families agree on clear rules and stay on top of things — without drama, pressure, or trading in personal data.

We don’t sell fear

Logy isn’t built around panic:

  • no push alerts like “URGENT! YOUR CHILD IS IN DANGER!” just to boost conversions
  • no red “anxiety meters” designed to make you pay
  • no intentionally dramatic wording in the interface

Real parental control isn’t about living in constant worry. It’s about clear agreements and practical tools: where your child is, how much time goes into apps, and whether the agreed rules are being followed — without emotional pressure.

No hidden charges

You should understand what you’re paying for before you pay.

With Logy:

  • no hidden subscriptions that get switched on “by accident”
  • no paid “extras” buried in settings in tiny print
  • no tricky trials that suddenly turn into an annual plan because “it’s a better deal”

Paid features are clearly marked. Free features don’t turn into a pumpkin after a week.

We don’t share data with third parties

We don’t sell or hand your data to ad networks, data brokers, or “partners.”

No “anonymized” fairy tales that later turn into “relevant offers” where they don’t belong. Your child’s and your family’s data isn’t raw material — it’s a responsibility.

We don’t monetize your data

There are two ways to make money:

  1. build a product and charge a straightforward fee for the service
  2. make it “free,” then aggressively monetize user data

Logy chooses the first. We earn through subscriptions — not by reselling information, profiling people, or running ads.

This isn’t just ethics — it’s common sense. Once a company starts monetizing data, it creates a conflict of interest: it becomes profitable to collect more, keep it longer, and use it more widely. We deliberately don’t build a business that would make us want “just a bit more data.”

Control supports trust — it doesn’t replace it

Logy doesn’t try to replace family conversations. It helps you:

  • set clear screen-time rules
  • see app usage without surveillance for its own sake
  • respond calmly and in time — not after the fact and on эмоции

Good parental control should lower tension in the family, not amplify it.

Transparency as a principle

We believe the basics should be simple:

  • explain what data is collected and why
  • provide straightforward controls and clear limits
  • make sure the product doesn’t feel like “spyware”