Here we go again : ISPs under pressure to control online porn

Started by DorsetBoy, Nov 27, 2010, 08:42:18

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DorsetBoy

Minister thinks of the children

QuoteCampaigners will meet with the internet minister, Ed Vaizey, to lobby for ISPs to be forced to control access to pornography.

Vaizey issued the invitation to Tory backbencher Claire Perry, who said the availability of sexual material online is "a fire is burning out of control".

The minister offered to act as an "honest broker" between campaigners and ISPs in the hope that action will be agreed.

"We are talking about preventing children from having access to inappropriate content, and how we can work with ISPs to make it that little bit more difficult for them to do so," Vaizey said.

The issue raised by Perry in a Commons debate on Tuesday is separate from that of blocking child abuse material. She wants tighter controls on material that is legal for over-18s to access.

"The current way of controlling access to pornographic material on the internet is via safety settings and filtering software, installed and maintained by users-parents, teachers and carers across the country," she said...... (more)

Yet again they want to end neutrality and impose restrictions on the net.

Surely ignorance and laziness are the problem here, there are already safety measures in abundance many totally free , M$/Windows builds in very effective controls . OpenDns and other services are there ....... where are the parents, why are children allowed unrestricted access to PC's, why are they not being supervised?

Simple answer as far as I can see......... the parents are NOT taking responsibility for their kids.

We also have the issue that it is not possible for an ISP to know who is actually viewing content, age restrictions are meaningless, anyone can change their age/dob online.

So what do you think ?

Rik

I think it's time that parents accepted responsibility for their kids, Dorset. Nanny states are not to my taste.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

pctech

If an ISP wants to offer a proxy filtering service that they charge for fair enough but I disagree with any fiddling with the packets whatsoever.

However, I do want to see those responsible for crimes against children caught.

Gary

Quote from: pctech on Nov 27, 2010, 09:52:43
If an ISP wants to offer a proxy filtering service that they charge for fair enough but I disagree with any fiddling with the packets whatsoever.

However, I do want to see those responsible for crimes against children caught.

There are enough ways to block porn sites, this is just another step to control of the net by the police/government. Parents should step up and take responsibility, also as children get older they want to 'look' god at school playboy was looked at by all the boys, its natural curiosity. Fine line between letting children grow up and explore their sexuality and making it seem a taboo and harming their view on something natural  :-\
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

DorsetBoy

Quote from: pctech on Nov 27, 2010, 09:52:43
If an ISP wants to offer a proxy filtering service that they charge for fair enough but I disagree with any fiddling with the packets whatsoever.

However, I do want to see those responsible for crimes against children caught.


Child porn is another subject Mitch, this is about access to adult material on "ordinary " XXX sites.

The child porn issue is a thorny one with thousands of new URL's in use a month BUT there are huge strides being made and it is much easier now to report illegal content and activity.

pctech

Fair enough, yes it should be accessible to those that want it and ISPs should be at liberty to provide optional filtering should they want to.

Gary

Quote from: pctech on Nov 27, 2010, 10:01:35
Fair enough, yes it should be accessible to those that want it and ISPs should be at liberty to provide optional filtering should they want to.

is that an opt in filtering, Mitch?
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

DorsetBoy

Quote from: Gary on Nov 27, 2010, 09:58:04
There are enough ways to block porn sites, this is just another step to control of the net by the police/government. Parents should step up and take responsibility, also as children get older they want to 'look' god at school playboy was looked at by all the boys, its natural curiosity. Fine line between letting children grow up and explore their sexuality and making it seem a taboo and harming their view on something natural  :-\

Exactly Gary, my lad went through a stage of doing all he could to take a look, I stopped it as best I could but they keep finding ways around your efforts, now he is 14 and well aware of these things I just let him look, once he had seen something really OTT he decided he really didn't want to see any more.Fact is sometimes the restrictions and "you must not " angle make matters worse.

pctech

Yes Gary, there will also always be ISPs that cater for the education sector that will filter traffic and I would expect that.


Rik

Quote from: DorsetBoy on Nov 27, 2010, 10:04:02
Fact is sometimes the restrictions and "you must not " angle make matters worse.

I agree. That which is forbidden becomes a target.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Simon

Looks pretty unanimous so far.  It's time parents took responsibility for their children's actions.
Simon.
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Ray

Ray
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Niall

I think it's obvious that it is the responsibility of the parent to monitor what their children do on the net. There are so many sites out there with warez, porn, etc that are targets for virus/malware attacks that at one point it got so bad that even genuinely innocent sites were having their adverts hijacked which takes you to dodgy sites. When I first got my PC in 1999 and got on the net, I was redirected to a quite horrific site (the effected site was download.com or something similar when I was looking for a zip program. As you can tell the experience is burned into my mind :().

This immediately led me to look for ways of protecting my PC. God knows what could have gotten on my PC if I hasn't started using various protection on there.

As for what your children do, I firmly believe you've got to tell them in no uncertain terms of the horrific things that are out there, and also the destructive effect it can have on the PC itself.

For a while now I've had a list of things that I block in my router via IP or URL. Sadly most dodgy sites are based on seemingly random IPs, hosted somewhere different each time with no apparent web address so it's near impossible to block them. Only this week I clicked on an advert claiming to be related to an RPG on someones forum, which sent me to a porn site.

This brings me to another point. I firmly believe that people should be held responsible when selling domains or hosting services mainly, to check exactly what is on their servers. 34sp for example were great for me. They always upgraded and improved security, and even implemented very strict security on their servers which actually limited you to certain types of forum, etc. If companies do not monitor their servers, then you're immediately fighting a losing battle.

Sadly most sites of a dubious nature seem to come from Russia or China in my experience. Other than doing your utmost to advise children and block what you can with blacklists and add blocking programs that have whitelists, there's not a great deal you can do about it :(
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armadillo

We are in danger of being unanimous! I agree with everything said so far. It is absolutely unquestionably the parents' responsibility. We should categorically resist any attempt by the government to censor anything which is legal. And the law should stay out of morals. If someone has a particular point of view on what they regard as moral, then it is acceptable for them to attempt to persuade others of their viewpoint through debate. But to impose their moral stance through legislation or censorship is completely unacceptable. They believe they are protecting children. I believe they are simply trying to impose their narrow-mindedness on everyone else. I have no objection to opt-in filtering and no government action is required to enable that to happen. Some ISPs already offer it.

The next step is getting ISPs to restrict content that some particular campaigner regards as inconsistent with their religious or political point of view. That happens in China, Iran and Saudi Arabia. It must not be allowed to get a hold here.

I also think there is something very perverse in a stance which regards pictures or video of naked people, or legal sexual acts, as corrupting but accepts the depiction of violence, which is always illegal.

How do we get rid of Vaizey then? I certainly did not elect him.

.Griff.

Quote from: Rik on Nov 27, 2010, 09:31:12
I think it's time that parents accepted responsibility for their kids, Dorset. Nanny states are not to my taste.

Exactly.

On another forum I use (Internet related) a question often crops up.

"How can I stop my 12/13/14 year old accessing the internet at night? They spend all night on their laptop on Facebook and don't do their homework"

My, perhaps, blunt approach is if you're the parent then either turn the bloody router off or take their laptop off them.

Does it have to be that complicated?!?!?

zappaDPJ

An ISP is a conduit for information. Why should they have jurisdiction or responsibility for what information is passed through that conduit. The Royal Mail is not charged with reading through everyone's mail to filter out what an uptight politician deems unsuitable for a particular section of the population. There would be rioting in the streets if that was allowed to happen.
zap
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

DorsetBoy

Quote from: .Griff. on Nov 28, 2010, 01:03:38
Exactly.

On another forum I use (Internet related) a question often crops up.

"How can I stop my 12/13/14 year old accessing the internet at night? They spend all night on their laptop on Facebook and don't do their homework"

My, perhaps, blunt approach is if you're the parent then either turn the bloody router off or take their laptop off them.

Does it have to be that complicated?!?!?


On a Windows system just set up user profiles and the timer in parental controls, child tries to log in and can't outside of their permitted hours, it is free and simple to use. Equally Windows provieds free content controls for age groups, there is zero excuse.

Gary

Quote from: DorsetBoy on Nov 28, 2010, 06:33:46

On a Windows system just set up user profiles and the timer in parental controls, child tries to log in and can't outside of their permitted hours, it is free and simple to use. Equally Windows provieds free content controls for age groups, there is zero excuse.
Thing is Dorset kids these days would suss that out I bet. Content control can be got around by proxy I bet, were there is a will there is a way, just hide the bl**dy router  ;D
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

pctech

Quote from: zappaDPJ on Nov 28, 2010, 04:22:03
An ISP is a conduit for information. Why should they have jurisdiction or responsibility for what information is passed through that conduit. The Royal Mail is not charged with reading through everyone's mail to filter out what an uptight politician deems unsuitable for a particular section of the population. There would be rioting in the streets if that was allowed to happen.

I agree Zap but I think ISPs should be at liberty to provide such filtering if they want to.

Rik

Though that's a different issue, Mitch. 1&1, for example, provide spam and virus checking on my email, but it's up to me if I use it.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Rik

Quote from: armadillo on Nov 28, 2010, 00:44:25
And the law should stay out of morals. If someone has a particular point of view on what they regard as moral, then it is acceptable for them to attempt to persuade others of their viewpoint through debate. But to impose their moral stance through legislation or censorship is completely unacceptable.

I agree with you on morality, Dill. Martin Booth, in his book "The Iron Tree", gave his 'hero' this speech:

Quote"As for morality, I don't believe in it. It's a man-made set of judgements, fashioned by each society to validate its own actions."

I believe it sums it up perfectly. The Mafia has its own set of morals, which differs from society at large, but which is part of their belief system. The Victorians were prudes, but didn't mind child labour, while drug-taking was an acceptable middle-class behaviour. The poor were restricted to gin. Certain religious or cultural groups believe in honour killings - all this in the name of morality. Give me no morals any day.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

zappaDPJ

Quote from: pctech on Nov 28, 2010, 08:28:53
I agree Zap but I think ISPs should be at liberty to provide such filtering if they want to.

If they want to offer a filtering service, that's fine, I'd just don't want to see it becoming mandatory :)
zap
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Simon

Quote from: .Griff. on Nov 28, 2010, 01:03:38
Exactly.

On another forum I use (Internet related) a question often crops up.

"How can I stop my 12/13/14 year old accessing the internet at night? They spend all night on their laptop on Facebook and don't do their homework"

My, perhaps, blunt approach is if you're the parent then either turn the bloody router off or take their laptop off them.

Does it have to be that complicated?!?!?

I agree totally with that approach - except that turning the router off would obviously stop the parent from using the internet too.

I don't actually know if kids need to be online to do homework these days, but would one solution be to disable network access on their personal laptops, and only allow them online on the main 'home' computer?
Simon.
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Rik

That's at the heart of it, isn't it, Simon. Let them use the 'net, but where they know they can be seen. It's not just the porn sites etc, but parents need to protect their kids from grooming, and they can't do that if they don't keep an eye on things.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

pctech

I don;t think kids should have Internet access full stop.