It's an open-source, community-curated catalog of YouTube videos that are safe for kids aged 3–12. The key idea is simple: nothing appears in the catalog unless real parents have actually watched the video and approved it.
The project came from a personal experience. He was watching YouTube Kids with his daughter when a video that started like a harmless cartoon quickly turned into something he would never have chosen for her. The automated filters allowed it through, which made him realize he didn’t want to rely on algorithms to decide what his kid sees.
So instead of trying to block bad content, KindScreen flips the model: only allow verified good content.
Every video in the catalog is watched and approved by multiple parents. No recommendation algorithms, no surprise autoplay rabbit holes — just a transparent list of human-reviewed videos.
The whole thing is open source and meant to be community-driven, so parents can contribute reviews and help grow the catalog.
Hope someone here enjoys it and very curious on finding out if it's something useful.