Safety review
Awards & Certifications
About the app
Slack is the premier digital workspace and professional group communication platform, designed to centralize and transform how teams, including older teens aged 16-18, collaborate on projects in a secure and efficient environment. Available globally across web browsers, iOS, and Android devices, Slack functions as the 'operating system for work,' bringing together people, knowledge, and tools into a single, intuitive, conversational interface. This award-winning platform, a recipient of the Webby Winner title, is an essential tool for high school students, college applicants, and those entering pre-professional environments, helping them develop critical collaboration and communication skills that mirror the modern workplace. Slack is available without a subscription for its basic, feature-rich service (Subscription Required: No) and does not display ads (Ads Present: No). At its core, Slack organizes all team communication into **channels**. These dedicated spaces can be created based on specific projects, topics, or teams (e.g., a high school debate team, a robotics club, or a group for college application essays).
Channels replace the fragmented, slow back-and-forth of email, offering both **real-time (synchronous) and asynchronous** discussion that allows users to participate in active discussions and easily catch up on conversations they may have missed. All messages and files posted within a channel are saved and highly searchable, which is a key feature for academic productivity and information management. Slack’s robust searchability means any file, decision, or conversation is instantly accessible, helping users get instant context and build on past work instead of recreating it, thereby improving the transparency within teams. Users can also send **direct messages** to individuals or smaller groups for private communication. For real-time discussions, Slack offers **Huddles**, a built-in video and voice tool for quick conferences and screen sharing. For asynchronous communication, users can leave **Clips**, voice or video memos, for teammates to view at their leisure.
Beyond messaging, Slack is a comprehensive knowledge management system. **Canvas** is a feature that allows teams to create, organize, and share essential business or academic resources within Slack, supporting rich media, files, and links to preview systems of record. **Lists** brings project and task management directly into the platform, helping teams stay organized by tracking, approving, and completing tasks right where their conversations are happening. **Third-party integrations** are a major feature of Slack, with over 2,600 popular apps available in the App Directory. These tools can be connected to the workspace, centralizing notifications, alerts, and actions, which significantly boosts productivity for students and young professionals. However, parents should note that third-party integrations introduce new risks, as these apps may have the ability to read messages and access user data. Because the app has tracking enabled (Privacy: Tracking: Yes), integrations and app usage should be carefully vetted by an admin, as poorly secured connections can expose login credentials and increase the risk of unauthorized access. For parents, understanding the safety profile is important. The platform's high **Parent Safety Score (92)** suggests robust internal safety measures.
However, as a professional group communication tool, the primary content risk stems from **unmoderated, user-generated communication** within its channels. While Slack is not a general social media platform, its collaboration features mean that sensitive user data and communications are handled within the system, presenting high data privacy and security implications. To mitigate security risks, Slack provides robust security features. The platform utilizes **encryption** to protect data both in transit (using TLS) and at rest (using AES-256 encryption on stored data). Slack operates under a **shared responsibility model**, meaning that while Slack provides the tools, the organization or an academic group's admin is responsible for how the platform is configured and monitored. Best practices for a secure environment, which parents should encourage older teens to adhere to, include: enabling **SAML-Based SSO and MFA (Multi-Factor Authentication)** to ensure only authenticated, authorized users can access the environment.
Defining strict **Data Retention Policies** is also critical, as by default, Slack stores all data, every message, channel, and file, indefinitely unless an admin puts retention periods in place. This default setting, while helpful for searchability, can widen the attack surface and requires proper management to prevent data leakage and ensure compliance with policies like FERPA in educational settings. Use of **Slack Connect** to collaborate with external individuals (e.g., contractors or mentors) should be carefully managed to ensure access is withdrawn immediately when a project is complete. Finally, employees and students should be trained on security hygiene, such as avoiding sharing sensitive information in public channels and reporting any suspicious activity immediately, as phishing attempts can easily mimic internal communication patterns. The platform also offers **Slack AI** as an optional add-on for advanced features like conversation summaries and enhanced search, and includes **Slackbot**, a personal AI agent, to further streamline work and information retrieval. Slack should be reviewed in real family use before recommendation.
Test first-session onboarding, age fit (16–18), data collection prompts, and monetization flows. Verify whether core tasks remain usable with limited connectivity, whether navigation is predictable for children, and whether adult controls are easy to find. Keep short supervised sessions and document where children need support. Re-check links and policy pages regularly because store listings and business models can change over time.
Selection Criteria
Our assessment is based on a review of four core pillars: privacy, age-appropriateness, educational value, and the absence of advertising. We also look to awards, certifications and other recognition. These combined factors determine the app's final safety rating.