Parental responsibility
Posted: Sun Dec 19, 2010 10:21 pm
They are talking about introducing a compulsory internet filter in the UK.
http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/world/all-internet-porn-will-be-blocked-to-protect-children-under-uk-government-plan/story-e6frfkui-1225973481287
We have had this discussion in Australia for the last three years and the public have rejected the idea.
Why?
1) It is not technically possible to block all internet porn or even a majority of it.
2) The porn industry has not agreed to any online classification system, therefore putting an age filter on your PC or at the ISP does nothing.
3) Most porn children are subjected to is via search engines such as Google. A lot of it is from discussion groups and online blogs that are not full time pornography sites.
4) If not all porn can be blocked, then surely the responsibility is with the parents to supervise their childrens' Internet usage and provide advice on what they should do if they find "rude" pictures.
If you sit down with your children and give them good sex education, including all of those graphic pictures and photographs that make biology teachers blush, then the curiosity that leads to looking at online "rude" pictures has been taken away.
Teaching them that there is a difference between "sex" and "making love" is important.
My daughters both have computers in their bedrooms and I have no worries about what they view online.
I know that using Google to search for just about any subject will throw up "pornography" and that they ignore it.
As for illegal porn such as child pornography.
The vast majority of that is shared via peer to peer networks that no technology has a hope of controlling.
http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/world/all-internet-porn-will-be-blocked-to-protect-children-under-uk-government-plan/story-e6frfkui-1225973481287
We have had this discussion in Australia for the last three years and the public have rejected the idea.
Why?
1) It is not technically possible to block all internet porn or even a majority of it.
2) The porn industry has not agreed to any online classification system, therefore putting an age filter on your PC or at the ISP does nothing.
3) Most porn children are subjected to is via search engines such as Google. A lot of it is from discussion groups and online blogs that are not full time pornography sites.
4) If not all porn can be blocked, then surely the responsibility is with the parents to supervise their childrens' Internet usage and provide advice on what they should do if they find "rude" pictures.
If you sit down with your children and give them good sex education, including all of those graphic pictures and photographs that make biology teachers blush, then the curiosity that leads to looking at online "rude" pictures has been taken away.
Teaching them that there is a difference between "sex" and "making love" is important.
My daughters both have computers in their bedrooms and I have no worries about what they view online.
I know that using Google to search for just about any subject will throw up "pornography" and that they ignore it.
As for illegal porn such as child pornography.
The vast majority of that is shared via peer to peer networks that no technology has a hope of controlling.