Shared logins break standards
One shared login means one shared history, one shared lens, and no real limits. FilteredTube family plans give each person a true account: their own gender lens, their own favorites and series progress, their own kids-mode settings where relevant.
What the plan owner controls
The paying owner manages the seats: add a family member by email, remove one instantly. Accounts can make their own experience stricter at any time; only the owner can loosen. One stream per account keeps six accounts honest.
The economics are almost beside the point, but they help: $14.99 for six real accounts is a fraction of what mixed households spend on services that work against their standards — and here the standard IS the service. Each account carries its own gender lens, its own library, its own limits; the plan owner holds the only key that loosens anything. It is a family structure translated into software: everyone has their room, and the house has its rules. Start with three accounts at $9.99 and grow into six whenever the family does.
At a glance
Key takeaways
- Real per-person accounts, not one shared login.
- Stricter is self-serve; looser is owner-only.
- $9.99 for three accounts, $14.99 for six — streaming only.
Continue with FilteredTube
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Search Torah and Jewish music inside the reviewed FilteredTube experience, or read how official embeds and licensed media remain separate.