I was recently debating in another journal about new suggestions for internet filtering, ostensibly to prevent children seeing child-inappropriate sites. This is normally met with -- imho justified -- cries of doom. However, it does seem likely that there would be ways to approach it which would actually do some good -- if you, as a reasonably technical aware person, were proposing something, what would it be?
Suggestions:
* Not support political censorship
* If it requires a large investment of manpower (eg. great firewall) be upfront about where that comes from
* Should fulfil stated purpose of allowing concerned non-technical parents to protect their children from inappropriate content to at least some extent
* Should not be a massive expensive unworkable pointless joke
* Should be clear if it will work a country at a time (probably not) or be a small but incremental improvement over large classes of website.
Whatever the government is thinking about is almost certainly unworkable. But if there were something NOT ridiculous which could be suggested instead, that would actually be better than just "it doesn't work", or at least make clear to people who DO want a solution that it may be expensive.
It might even have positive side effects if (eg) pure spam domain names were caught in the crossfire.
Suggestions:
* Not support political censorship
* If it requires a large investment of manpower (eg. great firewall) be upfront about where that comes from
* Should fulfil stated purpose of allowing concerned non-technical parents to protect their children from inappropriate content to at least some extent
* Should not be a massive expensive unworkable pointless joke
* Should be clear if it will work a country at a time (probably not) or be a small but incremental improvement over large classes of website.
Whatever the government is thinking about is almost certainly unworkable. But if there were something NOT ridiculous which could be suggested instead, that would actually be better than just "it doesn't work", or at least make clear to people who DO want a solution that it may be expensive.
It might even have positive side effects if (eg) pure spam domain names were caught in the crossfire.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 03:37 pm (UTC)Allowing the ISP to sell such a service means the parents don't have to worry about their offspring being more tech-savvy than them and circumventing solutions run on the home computer.
I think the decisions about what to white-list have to be made by humans to be properly effective. This would cost money which you could pass on to the people purchasing this service (which would probably deter people from purchasing the restricted service if they don't actually have a requirement for it). But obviously by having humans do this work you couldn't even hope to consider *all* of the web, and would end up excluding enormous amounts of stuff just because it's not popular enough to bother to check. Also the kind of people who demand porn be denied to children old enough to hack the net-nanny software are probably likely to also demand other, less obviously "bad" sites (such as sex-ed sites) are also banned.
I still think, though, that there are problems inherent in the proposition "let us prevent young people from interacting with material we don't like", even if you really do only affect the minor children of parents who actively sign up for your service. Internet resources can be a lifeline for young people whose identities are antithetical to their parents' views, to pick just one aspect.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 03:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 03:52 pm (UTC)* How to rate sites, white-list, black-list, self-rated, automatic, some combination?
* How to filter -- at ISP, on computer, on router? Is it easy to bypass with an appropriate password?
* What is the threat model? How do you transition from a five-year-old who may need constant parental monitoring to a 15-year-old who needs their own privacy?
* What do virgin mobile do, apparently they do some filtering? How comprehensive is google safe search? Is it possible to base something on such an existing list?
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 04:19 pm (UTC)What about a link to me in your post body? :)
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 04:21 pm (UTC)I don't understand why people think an automated system would be so bad. In practice Google Safe Search is very effective, as is the filtering on my mobile internet.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 04:48 pm (UTC)*if, therefore, you want to get all the non-porn then you are going to end up with some porn
*unless you have a large number of humans check for porn (assuming everyone agrees about what porn *is*)
At present a lot of anti-porn filters also filter out things like non pornographic nudity and factual websites concerning genital anatomy or sexual health. If we have a plan to filter EVERYONE'S internet (unless they specifically say "give me the porn") then people are going to be very upset if they can no longer read articles about breast cancer or buy their underwear on the internet.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 04:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 05:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 05:09 pm (UTC)I remember some school that, as an experiment, used fingerprint scanners to control access. What they did not stop to consider was the first thing anyone else would have asked -- if your scanners work 99.5% of the time, and several thousand people go in and out several times a day, what do you do when the scanner fails to recognise someone?
Apparently they ended up turning the scanners off, because there was always a backlog of people stuck behind someone who couldn't get in, and no consistent procedure for dealing with that.
Your proposal includes being able to selectively bypass the filter for specific sites, which would be a good answer to the problem of "what happens when you want filtering most of the time, but there are constant false positives and negatives?" At least its AN answer. But it seems likely implementing such a system will cost money and time, and everyone will just ignore the possibility and either turn the filtering off or live with it. Which is the problem.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 06:31 pm (UTC)I would expect the proposed system (which will probably never happen, but anyway...) would allow the customer to entirely opt out if they wanted to (like the mobile broadband system) and might even allow you to override on a site by site basis (e.g. "Enter your pin to unlock hotsexygirls.com for 1 hour").
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 06:34 pm (UTC)It'd pretty much only be of interest to parents who didn't have the savvy to restrict porn on their end (i.e. most parents) who were concerned about their kids accessing porn (i.e. almost all parents).
I haven't found the automated system provided by T-mobile to constantly get in my way, so I guess I find it odd that people expect the proposed system to be entirely unusable because my experience of it (well, what they'd almost certainly used) is that it isn't.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 06:36 pm (UTC)Actually I think I have an image problem among
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 06:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 07:52 pm (UTC)If it is meant to be robust against teenagers who are more tech-savvy than their parents (because if the parents were more tech-savvy they would have solved the problem of blocking sites they don't like from their teen's computers already!) then you can't allow the user to disable it from their computer. I imagine the process for turning it off would probably be quite irritating to manage (or it would be functionally useless).
If you are blocking porn because the user has decided themselves that they don't want to see random porn all over the place then you obviously include a "no no I really want to see this one" button. But if you don't want the user to have that power it's harder.
I admit I worry mostly about what non-porn things will end up classified as "not suitable for children". I'm not going to cry over kids not being able to see porn! But kids not being able to access information about sexuality and anatomy would be depressing.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 08:50 pm (UTC)If they need computers for schoolwork, those computers are offline.
Until the kid is old enough to be given a limited flexibility, then they should share the "family" computer the history of which is reviewed by the parents. The parents should discuss with children the appropriateness of various choices and how to avoid personal information being taken and how to avoid nefarious places online. "If there's a link in your twitter feed, don't click it because you can't tell where it goes. Rickrolling is a mild irritant compared to sites that give the computer viruses even past two firewalls." Or whatever the future equivalent is.
If there are intermittent returns to the big TV version for joint/supervised lessons about finding information online and evaluation of sources, I think that would provide enough training. Then by the time the child is a teenager in actual need of (limited) privacy, they have skills enough to avoid being defrauded or abused more than happens in real life.
I think it's a low-cost solution, since it costs for the wireless keyboard and cables to hook a computer to the TV, then there are no additional costs. It's implementable at a family level. It provides means for children to actually learn the skills they need instead of being dropped into boiling water at whatever "magic age". It requires no external input or agreement about what is appropriate for "all" children because it's done on a case-by-case basis. The only negative to this is that it requires a massive committment on the part of the parents to raise a productive healthy member of our society... which is exactly what they signed up for.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 10:50 pm (UTC)Customer activates their own filter, most likely by ticking a box in their ISP's setup software. Perhaps implemented on customer's ISP-supplied router but could (less conveniently) be part of the desktop software.
Of course, this covers the existing implementations, which plenty of people seem perfectly happy with.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 11:03 pm (UTC)I don't think such a system would be very effective at stopping truly determined late teenagers who are technically proficient (although I think it could make things much harder which probably is a good thing).
I agree it would be fairly pointless for preventing access for adults themselves. I suspect a better implementation might have a "The site is blocked due to being XYZ type of site. To unblock for your internet connection permanently or for X minutes enter your PIN here".
I think there would be some miscategorisation, that's inevitable, but this could be limited. Sites could optionally self certify and such self certification would take precedence over the algorithms categorisation. So a sex ed site could self certify as being non pornographic and so access would be allowed. Of course this is open to abuse, but it sounds like a good compromise to me.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-21 11:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-22 09:08 am (UTC)