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Standard User tommy45
(knowledge is power) Sun 17-Nov-13 23:21:43
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
Have done so along with all the other people who signed the petition 'Do Not Force ISP Filtering of Pornography and Other Content' which has so far has gained 37,657 signatures

Edited by tommy45 (Sun 17-Nov-13 23:22:18)

Standard User Oliver341
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Sun 17-Nov-13 23:24:38
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: tommy45] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by tommy45:
It should always be off by default

It is. But even if it isn't big deal if you have to log into the control panel and press a button which says "switch off".

Oliver.
Standard User deleted
(deleted) Mon 18-Nov-13 08:26:51
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: astateoftrance] [link to this post]
 
It's a thorny question - where does state intervention stop and parental responsibility start?

It's already common knowledge that filtering systems have limited success. Making an ISP have some filter will probably give parents a false sense of security, when in reality there will be ways around filters and those will be openly available to all teens who choose to dig a little, and even those who don't, if a more 'determined' friend visits and alters the laptop settings.

Some of the campaigners have a far more restrictive motivation than just blocking pornography, and some future government, if blocking ever came under their control, could use it to limit any activity which complains about their activities.

I can see the need for education (of parents, as well as youngsters) about the internet "good and bad", but see ISP/national filters as the wrong way to do this. NetIntelligence and others provide software solutions.

It was good to see that Mumsnet chose to withdraw their support for filtering, and a shame, in my view, that this is still going ahead. I hope Plus.Net won't make any changes.

There are "clean feed" solutions which parents could opt for (at relatively high cost, the last one I saw), but why should all customers have to fund such filtering when not all customers would wish to have any filtering? (Yes, any costs will be passed on, if not as a surplus fee, then I suspect in poorer customer service and other 'cost saving' measures which the ISPs choose to implement. Let's face it, some get a lot of criticism on CS already!)


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Standard User astateoftrance
(committed) Mon 18-Nov-13 10:49:39
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
All this does is give people the option of a filter, if you don't want it simply turn it off. No big deal. It is not the government taking over parental responsibility, it's just making things easier and more effective. If there is any extra cost passed on it's just one of those things you got to accept. Part of a responsible society.
Standard User deleted
(deleted) Mon 18-Nov-13 13:18:54
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: astateoftrance] [link to this post]
 
Clearly we will need to "agree to differ" - I don't see the adoption of a flawed method as doing anything more than waste money, and give false security to less knowledgeable parents.
Standard User deleted
(deleted) Mon 18-Nov-13 13:23:30
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: astateoftrance] [link to this post]
 
Perhaps a member of Plus.Net staff can give us whether any filtering is currently planned.

I've no doubt that adding another level of equipment to filter millions of requests won't come very cheap.

Also, if PN does have plans to "offer" a filter, can those who opt-out before they start work on it, be guaranteed a price freeze so they don't have to pay for it ?
Standard User Apprentice
(knowledge is power) Mon 18-Nov-13 14:01:03
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
They should make it like they did with the "Pro" feature as a Add-On, which if you want you pay extra for.

Alastair

plusnet
Standard User tommy45
(knowledge is power) Mon 18-Nov-13 16:16:46
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: Apprentice] [link to this post]
 
The other thing is camerloon is said to be spending a sum of £25 million on this campain Where is the money comming from ?
Also As said it should an addon thats available for a fee to those that want filtering , and that way we all dont end up paying for it

Edited by tommy45 (Mon 18-Nov-13 16:17:27)

Standard User deleted
(deleted) Mon 18-Nov-13 16:39:04
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: tommy45] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by tommy45:
The other thing is camerloon is said to be spending a sum of £25 million on this campain Where is the money comming from ?

I thought one of the web sites reported the funding as being from BT and VM.

Teaching parents a bit more about (a) what there is online (shock! horror!) and then (b) how most filtering / "blocking" is probably less than 80% effective, might get some better attention from parents, and force more discussion of things that their offspring may find, from gambling, slimming, suicide related sites right through to pornography, soft and hard...

It's why I mentioned NetIntelligence as a firm creating a filtering solution (they allow various options to be tailored, unlike this variable filtering {given that different ISPs will manage things differently!}).
Standard User Oliver341
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Mon 18-Nov-13 18:32:48
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Re: Parental Controls


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by ultra:
It's why I mentioned NetIntelligence as a firm creating a filtering solution (they allow various options to be tailored, unlike this variable filtering {given that different ISPs will manage things differently!}).

Sky's system seems quite customisable.

http://i40.tinypic.com/21320ph.png
http://i41.tinypic.com/1zdbwg6.png

(Note the "switch off" button in the second image for the worried amongst you)

Oliver.
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