Built by a parent. Grounded in real life, real family experience, and practical protection.
POSH was created by Graeme Ingle, known to many as Jinglez.
It was built independently by a father, carpenter, gamer, and community-minded Australian who wanted to create practical tools families could actually use.
Jinglez is an Australian father, qualified carpenter, and builder who believes protecting children begins with giving parents clearer awareness, stronger guidance, and practical tools they can actually use at home.
POSH stands for Parents Online Safety Hub — a platform built to help parents understand the online environments their children are growing up in and reduce risk before problems escalate.
At the centre of everything Jinglez does is family.
He and his fiancée are part of a large blended family with children across different ages, from very young through to older kids and teenagers.
Some are his own children, some are step-children, and others are part of the wider family circle who look to them as trusted adults and parental figures.
For privacy and safety reasons, personal details are kept limited. What matters most is simple: POSH was built from real experience caring for children, guiding children, and trying to protect children in today’s digital world.
For more than 16 years, Jinglez has worked as a carpenter and builder across Victoria.
Builders naturally look for solutions. When something is not working, you do not just talk about the problem — you design something better and build it.
POSH was created with that same mindset.
The internet is often spoken about only as a dangerous place for children, but it can also create genuine friendships and positive communities when used responsibly.
Jinglez met his fiancée through online gaming while playing Fortnite, and some of his closest friendships began years earlier through Call of Duty gaming communities.
Those online friendships later became real-world friendships through meetups, trips, and shared life experiences.
Many safety campaigns tell parents to “talk to your kids about online safety” — but very few explain what to say, when to say it, or how those conversations should change as children grow.
That gap is one of the main reasons POSH was created.
One of the strongest resources on the platform is the POSH Parent Scripts, built to help parents start age-appropriate conversations more confidently.
POSH is an independent project.
It is not government-built, not government-run, and not shaped by large institutions. It has been built from the ground up with one goal: helping families navigate online safety more clearly and more confidently.
If POSH resources have helped your family, you can support the platform by sharing it with others or contributing to help expand the project.
POSH is only the beginning.
The broader long-term vision includes stronger family supports, community-focused resources, safer environments for parents and children, and practical solutions that help families stay connected.
POSH was built because too many parents are overwhelmed, too many children are exposed too early, and too many families are left trying to work it all out alone.
If POSH helps one parent ask better questions, tighten safer settings, or have one calmer conversation with their child, it matters.