It’s easy to tell someone to delete their Apple account and start from scratch when it’s not your digital life on the line. But for anyone faced with such a reset, it’s not just inconvenient—it’s traumatic. And that’s just as true for children.
That’s because for Apple users, an Apple ID is more than a login—it’s a tether to friends, games, music, and treasured memories. For Google or Microsoft users, it can be the similar. It’s the scaffolding of an ever-evolving, and increasingly important, digital identity. But under very specific circumstances, systems built to support, delight, and even protect families can become a trap. Parental control systems like Apple’s Family Sharing.
But let’s rewind a bit.
On paper, Family Sharing is one of Apple’s great wins. Launched in 2014, it was rolled out by Apple’s head of software Craig Federighi as a kind of digital fridge door—an “easy way to share what’s important,” like calendar dates, photos, reminders, and even apps and media, with minimal fuss. For parents, there were other advantages too, like being able to track device locations, control how much time kids were looking at their screens, and what they were doing when they were. This was Apple at its most Apple: seamless and invisible when everything worked—a tidy blend of convenience and control.
Apple-y Families
But Family Sharing doesn’t come without its issues. Kids under 13 must belong to a family group if they want an Apple Account. But they can’t leave of their own accord—and nor can older kids if Screen Time restrictions are in play. The entire model implicitly assumes a traditional family structure, where one adult, the “organizer,” controls the purse strings—and everything else.
This digital take on the nuclear family is neat, in theory—if culturally archaic. One person in charge (and one payment card) keeps things simple when everything’s rosy. Apple isn’t alone in this thinking. Parental controls like Google’s Family Link and Microsoft Family Safety operate under the same assumption: a benevolent head of household within a stable family dynamic. But not all families fit that mold, which is why these systems start to break down when families do, or when they merely stray from an “idealized” notion of family. The lack of dual-organizer roles, leaving other parents effectively as subordinate admins with more limited power, can prove limiting and frustrating in blended and shared households. And in darker scenarios, a single-organizer setup isn’t merely inconvenient—it can be dangerous.
Kate (name changed to protect her privacy and safety) knows this firsthand. When her marriage collapsed, she says, her now ex-husband, the designated organizer, essentially weaponized Family Sharing. He tracked their children’s locations, counted their screen minutes and demanded they account for them, and imposed draconian limits during Kate’s custody days while lifting them on his own. “Invasive and coercive” is how she describes it. When Kate moved the children away physically, she wanted to cut the digital cord too—but it wasn’t that simple.
The Long Way Out
After they separated, Kate’s ex refused to disband the family group. But without his consent, the children couldn’t be transferred to a new one. “I wrongly assumed being the custodial parent with a court order meant I’d be able to have Apple move my children to a new family group, with me as the organizer,” says Kate. But Apple couldn’t help. Support staff sympathized but said their hands were tied because the organizer holds the power. (Apple declined to comment for this article.)
The consequences of such cases are not abstract. When families break down, family sharing systems can allow a noncustodial or abusive partner or parent to cling to digital control of their children. Their digital lives can remain in a coercive situation, even when their physical worlds are being forcibly moved on. Kate recalls her own children faced constant aggressive questioning about their movements, social interactions, and activities based on data served up by Apple Family Sharing. “It was frightening and insanely frustrating to realize we were still not free,” she says.
The standard advice given online under such circumstances is what opened this very story: Torch the accounts and start again, losing purchases, memories, and digital identities in the process. It’s simple, when presented with the alternative, but hardly a satisfactory fix. Fortunately, Kate’s tale has a happier ending. Her children wore down her ex by repeating a single refrain every time he contacted them: Disband the family group. Eventually, he gave in, and Kate could set up a new family group with the original accounts. “Finally, we could all exhale,” she says. “But kids should not have to parent their own parent because tech companies are severely lacking in policies for cases like ours.”
Unintended Consequences
None of these systems were designed to harm anyone. They are convenience wrapped in polish, meant for happy households. But like AirTags—another product launched with wholesome intent that later revealed the potential for darker uses—sharing systems have their own dark side. They can break when families do. While they are designed for stability, reality isn’t always so neat.
Ken Munro, partner at cyber security firm Pen Test Partners, says such oversights aren’t uncommon: “Ring doorbell users experienced a similar issue a few years ago, where it was impossible to remove a primary user. That meant ex-partners could connect and stalk a secondary user.” The solution, he says, was to buy a new doorbell. Still, Munro is surprised a company with Apple’s user-design pedigree “didn’t consider family unit breakdown, as appears to be the case.” Or, he claims, perhaps Apple did but “found adding all the possible user flows and logic for a family that separates would be a big task.”
