Filtering that follows the student, not the firewall — harmful content and phishing blocked on every network, deployed in minutes from the console your school already runs.
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Jamf Safe Internet is content filtering and network threat protection built for education: it blocks harmful content, phishing and malware on student devices wherever they learn — classroom, bus, home Wi-Fi — using DNS-level filtering that respects student privacy rather than surveilling browsing. It deploys in minutes from Jamf School or Jamf Pro, applies age-appropriate policies by group, and now covers Windows devices alongside iPad, Mac and Chromebook — so mixed school fleets get one safety policy. Filtering follows the device, not the school firewall.
This page covers Safe Internet — the student-safety layer. The rest of the seven-product lineup:
Most product pages skip this. We start here — so you buy a capability, not a buzzword.
Content filtering and threat protection scoped to education: harmful categories, phishing and malware blocked on student devices, with age-appropriate policies and enforcement that follows the device onto every network.
Jamf Safe Internet is the Jamf-native version: DNS-level and privacy-respecting, deployed from the school’s existing console in minutes.
What consolidation actually replaces, dimension by dimension.
| Dimension | School firewall + hope at home | Device-level safety (Safe Internet) |
|---|---|---|
| Coverage | The school firewall — ends at the gate | The device — every network, everywhere |
| Home learning | Unfiltered, and the school still liable | Same policy on home Wi-Fi |
| Privacy | Screen-surveillance suites parents distrust | DNS categories — safeguarding, not spying |
| Mixed fleets | A filter per platform, or gaps | iPad/Mac/Chromebook/Windows, one policy |
| Deployment | A second vendor, console and project | Minutes from Jamf School/Pro |
| Student phishing | Nobody's job | Malicious domains blocked at resolution |
| Bypass attempts | VPN apps and settings toggles win | MDM-enforced — survives teenagers |
| Cost shape | Filtering suite + integration labour | Per-student rates on the existing console |
Rollout is grade-by-grade — pilot class first, bypass drill second, and the firewall-only era ends by term’s end.
Vendors love diagrams; buyers need to know what they’re actually operating. Here’s the whole platform, demystified.
Requests resolve through filtered DNS with encrypted transport — harmful categories never load, and the school isn't reading anyone's screen.
Categories and exceptions by class, grade or group — Year 3 and Year 12 live under different, defensible constitutions.
Malicious domains, phishing lures and malware distribution blocked at resolution — the attacks aimed at students, stopped before the page exists.
Profiles push from the console the school already runs — safety becomes a checkbox in device management, not a second system.
Category-level insight for safeguarding leads — enough to act on, designed not to surveil.
One agent on every machine, one console over all of them — modules attach without a second operational world.
Safe Internet replaces the at-school-only filter — and the surveillance-suite trust tax — with protection that travels.
The core promise: policy applies on school Wi-Fi, the bus hotspot and home broadband alike — safeguarding stops ending at the gate.
Harmful and age-inappropriate categories blocked by policy — with sensible defaults schools can adopt on day one.
Rules by class, grade or group — the primary iPad and the sixth-form MacBook get different, defensible constitutions.
Search engines and YouTube forced into their restricted modes — the loopholes every student knows, closed by policy.
Malicious domains stopped at DNS resolution — the fake-login page aimed at a 14-year-old's credentials never renders.
DNS-level filtering with encrypted transport — harmful content blocked without reading screens or logging every page. Safeguarding, not surveillance.
iPad, Mac, Chromebook and Windows under one safety policy — the mixed reality of school fleets, finally one system.
Pushes from Jamf School or Jamf Pro as profiles — the safety layer deploys in the console the school already runs, in minutes.
MDM-enforced configuration students can't switch off — the VPN-app workaround generation meets management-grade enforcement.
Category-level reporting for designated safeguarding leads — signals worth acting on, without a surveillance archive.
Filtering at resolution, not proxying every byte — pages load at full speed and the lab's bandwidth stays for learning.
The natural bundle: classroom management and web safety from one console, one vendor, one bill — see the Jamf School page.
The official overview, the training-course introduction and the launch keynote.
The student-safety pitch — filtering that follows the device.
The training-course introduction — how the product actually fits together.
The launch story and the safeguarding philosophy behind it.
Want a live, India-context walkthrough on your own fleet?
Book a guided demo →Here’s what genuinely sets Safe Internet apart from the alternatives.
The firewall filters the school network; the obligation follows the child. DNS filtering on the device covers the bus, the bedroom and the hotspot — where the risk actually lives.
Category blocking at DNS level, not screen surveillance — the safeguarding board gets protection it can defend to parents, and students get dignity. The distinction wins school-community trust.
Deploys from Jamf School or Pro in minutes — management and safety stop being two vendors, two consoles and two renewal negotiations.
iPad carts, teacher MacBooks, the Chromebook trolley and the Windows lab — one safety policy across all four, since the Windows expansion.
Students are phished like adults, with less scepticism — malicious-domain blocking at resolution protects credentials and devices alongside the content mandate.
MDM-enforced configuration means the VPN-app trick and the settings toggle don't work — enforcement that survives contact with teenagers.
TechBag advisors map your fleet, policies-by-age needs and community privacy expectations — plus the Jamf School pairing if not yet in place.
Profiles push to a pilot class in minutes; policies tuned; the bypass drill run by the school's most determined Year 10 (we're serious).
Age-appropriate policies land grade by grade; SafeSearch and restricted modes enforced; parent communication sent.
Protection follows every device home, reports feed safeguarding reviews, and the firewall stops being the only line. TechBag handles renewals.
Trusted across Apple estates in 100+ countries
Modelled on Gartner Peer Insights structure. *Counts and breakdowns are illustrative pending verified review collection.
“Filtering used to end at the school gate; the incidents happened at home. Now the 1:1 iPads carry their own protection and the safeguarding meetings got shorter.”
“Deployment was genuinely minutes — profiles from Jamf School to 1,100 iPads before the staff meeting ended.”
“Parents asked whether we could see their children's screens. Being able to answer 'no — we block categories, we don't surveil' won the PTA.”
“A phishing domain targeting students' gaming accounts got blocked at DNS before anyone typed a password. Content filtering that also does security.”
“Windows support arriving meant the computer lab finally joined the same policy as the iPads. One system, at last.”
“The VPN-app workaround died with MDM enforcement. Year 10 was briefly furious, which we took as proof of function.”
“Reports give category signals, not browsing archives — enough for intervention, not enough to be creepy. The balance is right.”
“We evaluated the big filtering suites; the deciding factor was one console with Jamf School instead of a second vendor stack.”
Analyst firms bury this view behind paywalls, and G2 retired its Grid. So here’s TechBag’s synthesis of the student safety market — tap any vendor to see why it sits where it does.
Execution strength vs product vision — the classic market map, minus the paywall.
Console-native, privacy-respecting, mixed-fleet — the Jamf-school default. This page's subject.
The grid nobody publishes — filtering capability vs privacy posture and deployment weight.
The right scope at near-zero deployment weight — for Jamf schools it's a checkbox.
Positions are TechBag’s illustrative synthesis of public review-platform data and vendor documentation — not a reproduction of any analyst graphic. Verify before relying on it.
The philosophical split matters here: filtering vs surveillance. The matrix names it honestly.
| Dimension | Jamf Safe Internet | GoGuardian | Securly | Lightspeed Filter | Linewize |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heritage & focus | Jamf's safety layer | Classroom-visibility suite | Safety suite | The filtering veteran | Regional strength |
| Privacy posture | DNS-level, no screens | Screen visibility core | Monitoring-leaning | Configurable | Configurable |
| Off-campus enforcement | Native | Native | Native | Native | Native |
| Apple-fleet integration | Same console as Jamf School | Separate stack | Separate stack | Separate stack | Separate stack |
| Classroom visibility tools | Not the scope | The signature | Present | Present | Present |
| Threat (phishing/malware) blocking | Built in | Present | Present | Strong | Present |
| Economics | Per-student education rates | Suite pricing | Suite pricing | Module pricing | Suite pricing |
| Best fit | Jamf schools & privacy-first boards | Screen-visibility classrooms | Wellness-signal programmes | Filter-depth maximalists | ANZ/UK-centric schools |
Honest fit signals — because the fastest way to lose your trust is to pretend one product wins every scenario.
Drag the sliders (count student devices; use IT-hour cost as loaded staff cost). Estimates assume ~1.5 hours per device per year across incident handling, per-platform filter administration and bypass whack-a-mole, with ~60% removed by one enforced device-level policy — the safeguarding-liability reduction isn't priced in. Illustrative and conservative.
Loaded cost = salary + overheads per productive hour. Illustrative only — your TechBag quote models actual device counts and modules.
Safe Internet prices per student at education rates — quoted with Jamf School as one bundle. TechBag produces the single GST bill.
Best for the safety layer
Best for Apple classrooms
Best for campuses
Whatever the list prices above, TechBag negotiates a significantly better deal — with GST-compliant INR invoicing and local support. Ask us for your discounted quote.
Tell us your device counts and current tools — we’ll model it against what you spend today.
Take this into your next vendor call — including ours.
Take a filtered device home (or hotspot it) and verify the policy holds off-network. That's the product.
Let your most determined student attack it — VPN apps, DNS changes, settings. MDM enforcement should win.
Can you tell parents 'we block categories, we don't watch screens'? Verify what's actually logged.
Configure genuinely different policies for youngest and oldest — one-size filtering fails both ends.
Test the same policy on iPad, Mac, Chromebook AND the Windows lab machine.
Verify search and YouTube restricted modes actually enforce on every platform.
A legitimate site gets blocked mid-lesson — walk the exception workflow and time it.
Price Safe Internet + Jamf School together vs a separate filtering suite — one console usually wins on labour alone.
Get an education quote, scope a pilot-class deployment, or bring your fleet counts and let a TechBag advisor bundle School + Safe Internet in one bill.
Stats, ratings, review counts and pricing are illustrative and sourced from public materials; verify before purchase.