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CONSUMER REPORTS FINDS FILTERING SOFTWARES IMPROVE BLOCKS ON PORNOGRAPHY IMPROVED BUT RESTRICT ACCEPTABLE WEB SITES
— Software less effective at blocking hatred, drugs and violent sites; Five tips for concerned parents looking to protect
children who are surfing —
YONKERS, NY – Consumer Reports’ (CR) latest tests of filtering software show that while Internet blockers have gotten better at blocking pornography, the best
also tend to block many sites they shouldn’t. In addition, Consumer Reports found the software to be less effective at blocking sites promoting hatred, illegal drugs or violence. The June issue includes
ratings of 11 popular filtering software products and advice for concerned parents who are trying to better protect their
children online.
Internet filtering software inserts itself between a computer’s browser and Internet connection to prevent objectionable sites
from getting through. CR tested filtering software products – including the online services – that intercept all attempts to visit Web sites, and
then consult a list of sites that the software maker has deemed unsuitable for children. Some products can sniff out objectionable
material on the fly. For its tests, Consumer Reports built a list of objectionable sites that anyone can easily find, plus informational sites to test the filters’ ability to
discern the objectionable from the merely sensitive. Each of the filters was configured as if by a parent of a 12- to 15-year-old,
then the experts at CR tried to access the sites. CR found that:
- Filters kept out most, but not all, of the pornography. The worst performer blocked 88 percent, enough to serve as an obstacle, but not impervious to a persistent teen.
- Information sites can be snubbed, too. The best porn blockers were heavy-handed against sites about health issues, sex education, civil rights and politics.
- Research can be a headache. These programs may impede older children doing research for school reports.
- They can regulate more than Web sites. Some can prevent downloading of music, disable games, and screen email and instant messages for inappropriate language.
Five tips for concerned parents looking to protect children who are surfing
Consumer Reports recommends the following five ways that parents can better protect their children as they surf the Internet:
- Talk it over: Instruct children that when they encounter an objectionable site to exit the browser and call a parent.
- Keep things out in the open: Take computers out of kids’ rooms and put them into public areas.
- Chaperon chat rooms and e-mail: Let kids know who they can talk to online and to not give out any personal information.
- Check the logs: Parents can check the Internet filter’s activity logs – now a standard feature – to see which sites their children are attempting
to visit.
- Learn more: Parents can log on to ConsumerReports.org to access this report for free. Additionally, CR recommends additional sites such as the American Library Association and NetParents.org for more advice.
Most of the products that Consumer Reports tested can be set up in minutes. The top-rated filtering software is Safe Eyes (2005), $50 from SafeBrowse.com. In CR’s tests, this software offered the best combination of protection and minimum interference and is one of the few programs that
interfered minimally with search-engine results. For consumers that use MSN or want protection built into their Internet service,
Parental Controls (9.1) from Microsoft, which comes free with the MSN service, provides nearly the same protection as SafeBrowse.com
and lets parents set multiple age levels. But it lacks most features offered by other high-rated models. For Mac users or
families with young children AOL Parental Controls (9.0), which comes free with AOL service, offers the best pornography-blocking
and time-management controls, plus the ability to customize for different age levels. AOL also offered the best protection
among Mac-compatible products.
The full report on filtering software is available for free on www.ConsumerReports.org.
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