What Is WhatsApp Parental Control? A Plain Definition and Setup Guide for Parents
WhatsApp parental control is two layers: the app's privacy settings plus a parental control app on top. Here is how each one works for kids.
If you've found CrushOn AI on your child's phone — or you've stumbled across the name in their browser history, a Discord chat, or an APK file sitting in Downloads — you want a straight answer, not a thinkpiece. This guide gives you the verdict up front, the reasons behind it, and a practical block-and-talk workflow that holds up when teens pivot to clone sites or sideloaded apps. We'll cover what CrushOn AI actually is, why it pulls teens in, the real risks for minors, the signals worth checking on the device, how to block the site and its lookalikes across Android and iOS, and how to talk about it without pushing the behavior underground. A closely related platform is covered in is Janitor AI safe.
CrushOn AI is an adult NSFW AI roleplay platform aimed at users 18 and older, and it is not appropriate for pre-teens or teenagers. The product markets itself directly as a “No Filter NSFW Character AI Chat” built for uncensored romantic and sexual roleplay — that framing isn't buried in a terms-of-service footnote, it's the headline value proposition on the homepage. The 18+ gate is a self-declared checkbox with no real age verification, so any minor can click through in two seconds. Mozilla's *Privacy Not Included assessment (February 2024) failed CrushOn AI on minimum security standards, flagging excessive data collection and weak privacy controls. The rest of this article covers why the risks matter, the signs your child is using it or a clone, how to block it across devices, and how to talk about it without shame.
CrushOn AI is a character-based AI chatbot platform where users pick from a library of fictional personas — or create their own — and engage in open-ended text roleplay. Unlike mainstream chatbots that filter sexual content, CrushOn AI markets explicit NSFW roleplay as the core feature, not an edge case. The homepage and promotional copy lean on phrases like “uncensored,” “no filter,” and “NSFW,” with persona libraries that include explicitly sexual scenarios and fetish-coded characters.
Why teens find it appealing:
On distribution: CrushOn AI is generally not available on Google Play or the Apple App Store because of its adult content. Teens reach it through the mobile website, the desktop website, or a sideloaded Android APK downloaded from CrushOn AI's own site or third-party APK mirrors. That distribution pattern is exactly why standard app-store parental controls — including Family Link's app-approval flow — often miss it entirely. The block has to happen at the web and device level, not just the store level.
Lay these out clearly so you can name the concern in a conversation:
Taken together, these aren't theoretical risks. They map directly to what a typical teen interaction with the platform looks like — a curious search, a self-declared 18+ click, a sideloaded APK, and a chat history living on a server the family has no control over.
If you suspect use but haven't confirmed it, check for these specific signals before bringing it up:
No single signal proves use, but two or three of them together — especially the APK plus the unknown-apps permission — is a strong indicator that the conversation needs to happen.
Block in layers. A single URL filter is the easiest workaround in the world; a layered defense is what actually holds.
Done in that order, the device is closed off at the install layer, the browser layer, the search layer, and the network layer — and the teen can't undo any of it from their side without your code. A track social apps view sits over all four layers, alerting you if a CrushOn clone or a new AI-companion app slips through any one of them.
A URL block on one browser is the easiest thing in the world for a teen to step around. They open another browser. They switch to Incognito. They type “crushon ai alternative” and land on a clone you've never heard of. The defense that actually holds is one that combines a named URL blocklist, a category-level filter, enforced Safe Search across every browser, and visibility into what's being attempted after the block goes up. NexSpy is built around that layered model.
NexSpy's Website Restrictions let you add crushon.ai to a custom URL blacklist in seconds, along with any clone or alternative URL you've found in browser history. Because the block sits at the device level rather than inside a single browser, switching from Chrome to Samsung Internet or to a private tab doesn't get the teen past it. When a new clone surfaces — and it will — you add the domain to the same blacklist and the block extends to it immediately. The custom allowlist works in parallel for legitimate sites your teen needs for school or hobbies, so the filter doesn't become a blanket lockout.
The bigger problem with NSFW chatbots is the long tail. New sites appear weekly, and you can't blocklist what you don't know exists. Turn on the NexSpy adult-content category and the filter catches newly surfaced NSFW chatbot sites without you updating a list every time. Pair it with the drug, violence, and gambling categories if you want broader coverage of the kinds of sites that tend to cluster alongside NSFW chatbot ecosystems.
Most teens find a new NSFW chatbot through a search — “crushon ai alternative,” “no filter ai chat,” “best nsfw character ai.” NexSpy enforces Safe Search across Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera, Samsung Internet, and Safari, which strips most of those results out at the source. The teen sees a thinner SERP, and the suggested-search rails that normally surface the next chatbot to try go quiet.
On Android, NexSpy also gives you browsing history review, so you can see what was attempted after the block went up — useful both for spotting clone sites you should add to the blacklist and for noticing if the underlying interest is shifting somewhere new. The per-app block, instant or scheduled, covers any sideloaded chatbot APK or unfamiliar AI companion app that ends up on the phone. And the child request-permission flow gives a teen a built-in way to ask for access to a legitimately blocked app, which keeps the conversation open instead of turning every block into a cat-and-mouse fight.
A few honest limits: browsing history review is Android only — on iOS you'll lean more heavily on the URL blacklist and category filter. Some app blocks depend on the Android or iOS version and the permissions granted during setup. And brand-new clone apps may take time to be recognized, which is why the category filter and the custom blacklist work as a pair rather than as substitutes.
Lead with curiosity, not accusation. The opening line that works is some version of “I saw CrushOn AI on your phone — what did you like about it?” before any version of “here's what's wrong with it.” A teen who feels caught will lie or go more underground; a teen who feels asked will usually tell you more than you expected.
Acknowledge the real pull. The appeal is privacy, no judgment, curiosity about sex and relationships, and sometimes loneliness or social anxiety. Those are real needs, and pretending they aren't makes the rest of the conversation feel fake.
Name the specific concerns clearly, without moralizing:
Reframe the block as a safety floor, not a punishment. Explain what you did — uninstalled it, blocked the domain, turned on the category filter — and explain why. The block is one piece; the conversation is the other.
Offer alternatives for the underlying need: a trusted adult to talk to (you, an aunt or uncle, a school counselor), age-appropriate books and resources on relationships and sexuality, more screen-free time with friends. Set a check-in for two weeks out so it's not a one-shot lecture.
WhatsApp parental control is two layers: the app's privacy settings plus a parental control app on top. Here is how each one works for kids.
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