Can't beat it join it... No i'm just kidding...
the best bet isn't so much with a technical resolution but rather disciplinary resolution.
surely if you were to find a means of blocking out certain sites, the disobediancy of the child is still there and will cary it out in other ways other than just surfing porn sites.
be strict and firm and take away the PC from the child. In some cultures beating up the kid would be not only acceptable but very well promoted. unfortunetly here in the U.S. and it's infinite wisdom of child protection and foreign policy (off the subject) it's illegal.
Ok.. ok.. tech talk..
try using a shoot I forgot the application name.. .. Panera Bread uses it so people won't surf on certain sites...
ok till i think of it.. one of the things you can do is when after your child has visisted the sites, you can go to history and copy and past the sites. then add them to the restricted sites. To do this :
go to this site:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/using/howto/security/settings.mspx
good luck with your kid, and just tell 'em to get *** Nah just kidding**..
ArtChess
Junior Poster in Training
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If you are using IE, I believe there is a content manager. It won't keep out of all porn sites, but it will certainly cut off a good portion of them.... the point being, it will require a lot more work to get to them.... you could consider using something like cybernanny, or another content manager....
Comatose
Taboo Programmer
2,910 posts since Dec 2004
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Hello,
Technology won't be able to stop social problems. I don't want to get into how to raise your child, that is your scope, and for you as the parent (s) to work with. I do not have any kids yet, so I cannot speak from experience either. Perhaps this is a call from him to want to find out more about adult activities. Might be time for parents and son to sit down and discuss the birds and the bees.
I think the argument of needing the internet is bogus from him concerning schoolwork. Not every child in America has access to the internet, so he can/should be able to do his homework the old fashioned way -- the library, at school, whatever.
If you want to get technical, you could try altering the DNS addresses of some of his common sites, but you are going to be continually chasing that duck as it waddles around your pond. You might also try various pieces of software to block him.
But in the end, I think it is going to take strong parenting to curb this. Talk to a doctor / psychologist. Call the school, and be active in his life, and see if you can convince him that he does not need porn in his life. There might be something social going on.
Christian
kc0arf
Posting Virtuoso
1,937 posts since Mar 2004
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Good comments in this topic already. Removing his privileges to use the PC is the obvious answer.
But be sure that he's actually viewing porn. Just because there are porn links in internet history doesn't guarantee that porn sites have been visited and viewed. Those links in history can also come from advertising. Hell, I've picked them up browsing for CD cover art and such, and ended up in heated debate with my wife over it until I showed her just how innocently the links can get there!
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
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Hello dfederman,
Given the fsct that I've been through these issues with many of my "real life" clients, I have to agree with Christian and Catweazle.
Basically: there is no technology-oriented solution that will solve your problem. While the Internet is an absolutely essential tool for doing schoolwork, there is really no foolproof way to limit your child's use of any given computer to only that sort of work.
Here's what I would suggest:
Get him his own computer; base models that will serve his needs education-wise are fairly cheap. The computer doesn't need to be capable of doing anything more than the basics needed for his work. Complaints about things like the graphics card not being able to support the games he wants to play and the like should obviously be ignored.
This one I've unfortunately been through with one of my clients, even after she did get a dedicated computer for one of her kids:
The teenager ignored all of my recommendations, and also refused to use any of the protective programs I installed. Being "his" computer, he also had convinced his parents that his user account had to have administrative rights, which obviously meant that he could undo/uninstall/disable any of the utilities I installed.
I eventually told the parents that it wasn't in their best interest to keep paying me to come over and clean up this computer, and that I would no longer do so; they agreed.
The upshot of that was that the child in question did, of course, screw up his computer once again (to the point that it wouldn't even boot), and had to resort to going to the local library to use their computers for his homework.
He was barred by the library shotly after that for doing the same things to their computers that he had done to his home computer...
DMR
Wombat At Large
7,229 posts since Dec 2003
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Just thought i would put my 2 cents in.
One way to stop a site from comming up is to add it to your HOSTS file...
Unfortunately though:
- You have to do that for each and every site that you want to block.
- You would (obviously) have to know the URL of every site that you want to deny access to.
- The kid could remove the host file entries in less time than it took to put them there.
DMR
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g0rb4ch3v
Junior Poster in Training
86 posts since Oct 2003
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Unfortunately, one of the drawbacks of programs like Cybersitter, NetNanny, etc. is that they can actually block legitimate sites and/or content. Their filter lists are not perfect, and can sometimes be a bit too "conservative".
DMR
Wombat At Large
7,229 posts since Dec 2003
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well... switch to a secure windows and deny access to the hosts file... come on people... there are always ways to do things... there are always ways to undo things also... but set it up correctly and it is not likely that the child is going to be able to undo it.
We try, believe me we try. I suggest you read this topic again with a more open mind. what we are trying to show is that it is IMPOSSIBLE to get a machine to perform this task (blocking children from internet porn) for you. The problem is not one which is related to computing methods. It's one which is related to parenting methods and the effectiveness of communication between parents and their children.
You cannot get a computer to do the parenting for you!
Catweazle
Grandad
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dlh6213
Posting Maven
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