Setting multiplayer permissions for worlds.This means your child never has to worry about receiving an unwanted message directed at them. Minecraft no longer has private messaging in online play, just to make it easier and more effective to monitor for inappropriate chat between players. Most servers also have expanded chat filters. This catches the things that fall between the cracks, as well as putting a stop to misconduct between players. Online server partners with Minecraft also have dedicated teams of moderators that work to ensure everyone is getting along, and that the chat filter is doing its job. This filter is expanded upon over time, so it gets better at catching unwanted chat with every update. Whenever your child is in an online game, the text chat searches for inappropriate words and automatically filters them out. This means you can make it so players can't attack each other, can't destroy things, and more. Another thing you can do from inside the pause menu is edit the individual permissions players have. This lets you and your child quickly deal with unwanted behavior. Any players inside your child's world or server can be added as a friend, muted, blocked, or reported from inside the game's pause menu. Muting, blocking, or reporting players in-game.This includes things you can do in-game to respond to or moderate other players, and things Minecraft does without you raising a finger. That's why Minecraft has additional protections in place to make online play even safer for your family. Xbox Live is an awesome platform for family-friendly online play, but it can't get everything.