Porn Filters Ineffective at School or Home

0,,5625509,00.jpgThe Australian Government seems to be hell-bent on wasting money on an ineffective home and ISP filter systems which are very likely to be bypassed easily by simple strategies including the huge and growing number of “anonymous proxy” sites.

These sites provide a window within a window. The school, home or government computer registers that the user has gone to the proxy site….. and stayed there. The inner window then allows the user to go anywhere, look at anything without any trace…..

As in so many areas of law enforcement (in or outside school), the only real deterrent is a “climate of fear” regarding severe and public punishment for offenders caught by traditional methods - surveillance, informers, mistakes by the perp (e.g. storing images on local machines for later viewing).

Porn filters no barrier for net users (Herald Sun)


1 Response to “Porn Filters Ineffective at School or Home”

  1. 1 vivavoce

    The system is flawed in that it shouldn’t be the user but the people the run these sites in the first place that should be the target of governments (world wide). There should be tougher legislation and severe penalties not only for the people that run these sites but for the companies that allow these sites to operate on their networks.

    Parents shouldn’t assume filters are the answer either, they are responsible for their children and their childrens safety so they need to remain vigilent at all times, even if or when their children have issues with this.

    As computers and the internet are part of the education system, teachers & the education department have a responsiblity to ensure they also are constantly vigilant, and both they are parents need to continually educate children on the dangers of sites and why certain sites are inappropriate.

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diggers

Stephen Digby is a teacher, writer, reader and music lover. He has taught for 20 years in primary, technical and high schools in Victoria, Australia. His roles include administrator, teacher, consultant in computer education, maths and science. Career highlights include: developing a Computer Education Teacher Training Centre; working as a curriculum writer for the Information Technology Study of the Victorian Certificate of Education; working in Ohio on an International Teaching Fellowship; studying the Singapore Education System during an extended study visit. http://www.digbys.com

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