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Understanding Digital Risk

Before It Becomes Harm

We are developing a new approach to child digital safety, focused on understanding how risk actually develops in today’s digital environments.

We are currently inviting a small group of parents to join an early pilot.

Before It Becomes Visible

Children today grow up inside private, digital environments that are difficult to fully see or understand.

Much of what happens online is not obvious.
It develops gradually, through interaction over time.

Many parents feel this.

A sense that something is shifting,
without always being able to clearly see what.

A young girl with curly hair sitting on a gray couch, using a laptop, wearing a pink sweater and blue jeans with white socks, in a room with plain white walls.
Close-up of a metallic, shiny sphere with a distorted reflection of the surroundings.

How Risk Quietly Develops Over Time

Most existing approaches focus on monitoring, restrictions or reacting after something has already happened.

But risk rarely begins as a clear event.

It develops quietly.
Through patterns.
Over time.

A young person playing a soccer video game on a handheld gaming device in a dimly lit room.
A distorted, metallic-looking, spherical object with a dark black center and a shiny surface reflecting light.
A young boy sitting on a couch at night, illuminated by a tablet screen, with a blurred living room background, including a doorway and a bookshelf.
A close-up view of a metallic, reflective, spherical object against a dark background.

A Different Approach to Early Risk

SecureHaven is exploring a different approach.

Not focused on surveillance or control,
but on understanding behavioural patterns and early signals of risk, while respecting privacy and trust.

We are currently in an early research and development phase, working closely with parents and experts to shape this approach.

Children playing a game on a tablet with cartoon characters on the screen, sitting on a wooden floor.
A metallic, reflective sphere with distorted reflections and bright highlights on a black background.

Join the Early Pilot

We are inviting a small group of parents to take part in an early pilot.

This is not a product launch.
It is a collaborative process.

Participants will help us better understand:

  • how digital risk is experienced in real life

  • what parents need in practice

  • how support can be designed in a meaningful way

A woman with red hair sitting on a sofa with two young children, one girl and one boy, in a cozy living room. The girl is holding a tablet, and the boy is sitting on her lap. The room has a blurred background with hanging lamps and a kitchen area.
An abstract, distorted close-up of a metallic or reflective spherical object with irregular coloring and surface texture.

• Have one or more children between the ages of 6 and 18
• Feel a genuine concern about online interaction and digital environments
• Are open to sharing their perspective and experiences
• Are willing to stay engaged through updates and occasional conversations

This is a small and intentional group.
We are focused on quality, not scale.

We are currently looking for parents who

What to Expect

Young girl with long curly hair wearing a rainbow-colored headband, sitting at a table, holding her head with both hands, looking down at a tablet device in front of her.
A metallic, reflective sphere with a dark core and rainbow-colored highlights, set against a black background.

As part of the pilot, you will:

• Be part of an early group shaping a new approach to child digital safety
• Receive insights and learnings as we develop
• Be invited to optional conversations and feedback sessions
• Stay closely connected to how this evolves over time

Questions You Might Have

  • No. SecureHaven is not designed to monitor conversations or track content It focuses on understanding behavioural patterns over time, without exposing private messages or breaking encryption.

  • No. SecureHaven does not provide access to conversations. The goal is to support awareness, not to remove privacy.

  • Risk is not defined by individual messages, but by patterns of interaction over time. The system looks at how behaviour evolves, rather than what is being said.

  • No. This approach is designed to complement existing systems, not replace them. It introduces earlier visibility, before formal safeguarding typically begins.

  • We are currently working with a small group of parents and experts to explore and shape this approach. This is an early phase focused on learning and refinement.

  • Signals are designed to be calm, proportionate, and supportive. They aim to help parents become aware earlier, so that small actions can be taken before escalation.

A young boy with brown hair is lying on a teal couch, focused on a smartphone in his hands. He is wearing a white shirt with black animals printed on it, dark green pants, and gray socks. The boy is sitting with his legs bent and resting on the couch, with a decorative throw blanket with leaf patterns partially visible in front of him.

Encryption is permanent. 

Childhood is not. 

Protection must evolve.

SecureHaven exists to close that gap.