Connor DeLoach • Corpus Christi Parish

A safer, more peaceful internet for your family

This guide explains how I use NextDNS to protect devices, reduce tracking, and add practical friction to online distractions.

I want to share an effective, simple tool that I believe every Catholic household can benefit from. Using your internet provider's default settings is like leaving your front door wide open. Here is what DNS is, why it matters, and how to use it to safeguard your family's home network.

How network-level protection works

Instead of installing software on every phone, tablet, and TV in your home, you change one setting on your WiFi router. This acts as a protective shield for everything connected to your network.

YOUR HOME NETWORK Laptop Phone Tablet Smart TV WiFi Router NextDNS Filter & Shield All DNS Requests THE INTERNET Safe Sites Malware & Phishing Ad Trackers Adult Content & Distractions Allowed Blocked at network

What DNS actually is

DNS is the lookup system that turns names like google.com into the numerical addresses devices use to connect.

That lookup runs constantly in the background for websites, apps, smart TVs, and games. Most homes use their ISP's default DNS and never revisit the choice.

Why this matters for privacy and security

DNS requests reveal where your devices are trying to go. With a filtered provider, many risky or inappropriate domains can be blocked before pages or app content even load.

What NextDNS adds

NextDNS still does normal DNS lookup, but adds essential policy controls: security blocklists, category filters, logging, and encrypted DNS.

Because this happens at the network layer, it can block trackers, malicious domains, and temptations across many apps—not just in your web browser.

Why you should consider learning this tool

Most households do not need every toggle. These are the practical reasons this setup tends to provide lasting peace of mind.

Protect first, tune later

Start with basic malware and tracker blocking in minutes, then add stricter filters for your family over time.

Works at the network level

A router-level setup applies rules to all devices before apps and websites even load, keeping your whole home safe.

Flexible for all households

Use one baseline profile for everyone, or create stricter rules for children's devices and school hours.

Adds friction to temptations

Schedule blocks on social media, gaming, and video sites so your environment supports your family's spiritual and practical goals.

A simple implementation path

If you are starting from scratch, this order gives quick wins without overcomplicating your first week.

  1. Step 1

    Start with safe defaults

    Enable protection against malicious sites, block known trackers, and turn on secure DNS encryption.

  2. Step 2

    Set family boundaries

    Use broad category blocks (like adult content or gambling) as guardrails, then add specific site blocks if needed.

  3. Step 3

    Apply time-based rules

    Add schedules for school, prayer time, family dinners, and focused work so limits match your daily rhythm.

What each dashboard view is for

These are the screens most people use regularly. Click any image to view it full size.

Block by category

Set broad content boundaries by topic for the entire household.

  • Use this as your first pass: adult content, gambling, and similar categories can be blocked quickly.
  • Start broad, then move to per-site rules only where needed.

Click image to enlarge.

Block by site

Target specific sites and app domains when categories are too broad.

  • Perfect for edge cases: keep an entire category open, but block one recurring problem domain.
  • Allows precision control for school apps, games, or social services without overblocking.

Click image to enlarge.

Bypass protection

Block common methods people use to sidestep household rules.

  • Reduces bypass paths such as Tor and many proxy or VPN routes.
  • Important for consistency when limits are meant to support children or focused routines.

Click image to enlarge.

Privacy and tracking blocklists

NextDNS offers curated blocklists that update continuously, so you do not need to maintain your own list of tracking domains.

A strong low-breakage starting point is often HaGeZi - Multi LIGHT.

Time schedules for specific blocks

Rules do not have to be all-or-nothing. Scheduled deny rules let you block distractions during school or work windows while allowing normal use later.

This is useful for both children and adults who want stronger guardrails around intentional focus and family time.

FAQ

Do I need to be very technical to use NextDNS?

No. Most families only need a small set of features: security blocklists, category filtering, and basic logs. You can start simple and improve gradually.

Is this only useful for households with kids?

Not at all. Parents use it for family safety, and adults use it for privacy and temptation control during work or study blocks.

Will this replace antivirus or all other security tools?

No. NextDNS is a network-level filter, not full endpoint protection. It should complement, not replace, normal device security and good browsing habits.

Can we tailor this to our values and routines?

Yes. You can tune category strictness, block specific sites, and set schedules around school, prayer, family time, and focused work.

If you already know Covenant Eyes

Many people ask whether this replaces Covenant Eyes. Usually the best answer is that they solve different parts of the same problem. NextDNS handles prevention at the network level, while Covenant Eyes handles accountability and follow-through on a personal level.

What NextDNS does best

Prevents bad or distracting traffic before apps and sites even load.

  • Network-level filtering for all devices in the home.
  • Strong protection against malware, trackers, and adult categories.
  • Great for reducing exposure and adding practical friction.

What Covenant Eyes does best

Creates accountability through monitoring, reports, and trusted allies.

  • Focuses on behavior patterns and accountability relationships.
  • Crucial when someone needs relational support, not just filtering.
  • Helps bring internet struggles into the light through conversation.

How they work together

One lowers temptation; the other strengthens accountability.

  • Use NextDNS as the baseline guardrail for the entire household.
  • Use Covenant Eyes for individuals who need deeper personal support.
  • Together they form a strong foundation of prevention and accountability.

The bottom line

NextDNS is one of the highest-impact upgrades you can make to your home network. It is affordable, flexible, and effective for both family safety and personal discipline online.

Keep your initial setup simple, observe how it works for a few days, then add stricter rules only where you consistently need them.

Personal note: While NextDNS has solid documentation, if you are having trouble setting it up, I am happy to help you get it working. Email me at connor-next@deloach.dev .