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Proxy Sites Offer Secret Passage to Myspace

JafSquared writes "As sites like MySpace.com gain popularity in young adults, schools all over are finding that taking measures to keep kids blocked out of these websites is becoming increasingly difficult. As this hype continues, proxy servers such as "Box of Prox" are springing up like wildfire. While system admins furiously work to diminish the strain placed on their school's local networks from sites like MySpace, these proxy sites are enabling easy access to restricted areas. However, schools aren't the only places that are feeling the heat. Proxies have also been becoming a bit of a complication in the workplace. To the more advanced user, the proxy server can become a tool for malicious intent as this article, delivering an anecdote with the termination of an employee, so poignantly details."

11 of 330 comments (clear)

  1. Proxies? by Goaway · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wow, Slashdot sure is on the CUTTING EDGE of TECHNOLOGY NEWS!

    1. Re:Proxies? by kbox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't know why hes post has been modded as troll, He has a point.
      No wonder digg is getting more hits than slashdot now.

      What with last weeks post about installing windows, and now this one "informing" us about proxy sites slashdot seem to be posting very trivial things now, Hardlly the cutting edge tech news site it used to be.

    2. Re:Proxies? by deblau · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or, proxies have been the solution for years and years. Depends on which side of the table you sit.

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
  2. Do we have a war on social networking yet? by Spazntwich · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm just waiting for more fallacious appeals to emotion in the fight against kids talking to one another.

    Do politicians even consider how ridiculous their arguments are? Why, ghettos have become a haven for drug dealers, prostitutes, and other nerdowells! Do we ban ghettos? No, I believe parents simply teach their kids about the dangers of going there, and before they're old enough to understand that, the parents simply don't allow them to go there.

    It's sad how human ignorance comes back with a vengeance with the emergence of any new technology or tool, without fail.

    1. Re:Do we have a war on social networking yet? by namityadav · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If school admins try to block sites that kids just HAVE to get to, then the kids will find a way to do so (Hint for Kids: Read about SSH / VPN). And once they know that they've found a way to bypass the school security, their curious minds would want them to check if they can now access porn this way too. The point that I am trying to make here is that the more freedom you try to take away, the more you're encouraging them to break the rules. I, for one, am happy that this will make at least a certain percentage of the kids aware of proxies, private networks etc. It's time that those nerds get to have some 'coolness' factor about them.

    2. Re:Do we have a war on social networking yet? by timeOday · · Score: 4, Insightful
      before they're old enough to understand that, the parents simply don't allow them to go there.
      Which is exactly what they're trying to do. Stories like this inform parents that establishing those boundaries is harder than they thought.
  3. Internet @ School by toochoos · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wonder why kids have internet access at school. Do someone really want them to have ADHD since childhood? Aren't they supposed to learn something while they sit in waiting to be online back home?

    --
    Sorry for me spell bad, not a native but I'll do my best
  4. Strain on networks? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Set up a bandwidth-shaping/QoS-type system that guarantees certain computers (office computers, presentation boxes in classrooms) a certain bandwidth. The other computers can share the scraps from this. In order to prevent hogging of the scraps, also set up a system where the remaining bandwidth is doled out more or less equally to those who need it. With routers running Linux, this should be less difficult than it seems.

    Blocking sites is a half-assed solution since students will always find a way to expend bandwidth. (Personally, I think that the 'net doesn't need to be in classrooms anyway. I went to HS from 1993 to 1997 and survived just fine without going online in school.)

    -b.

  5. Restrictions are evolutionary pressure by Gopal.V · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The average kid in school, thinks proxies and mucking around with computer stuff are the realm of nerds, sitting in their parents' basement typing away, creating a pathetic online world to compensate for the real one upstairs.

    But the moment, you introduce blockades to access to a "cool" thing like myspace or facebook, these talents become valuable in terms of utilization. More kids learn these, use these and try to out-do the other in terms of l33tness. If there aren't the artificial boundaries drawn by the authorities, these skills would have never been learnt, developed and hopefully put to good use in the future.

    Whatever they block these with, they just raise the bar for the kids. Clever, curious and with the power of the rest of the internet behind them ... there's nothing that's totally blocked off. Probably threats to those who break the security and offer real world punishments maybe, but blocking it all is impractical. Of course, then there are those who prefer forbidden fruit to the ones in the fridge, for the momentary thrill of breaking some rules.

    I remember breaking the proxy at a college where I was giving a talk. All I did was ssh -D 8080 into my box and bypassed the "security" of the campus network. But I did that by unplugging the monitor cable, running ssh and plugging the monitor back on in under 2 minutes.And lo, meebo.com suddenly worked. The kids thought I was some great genius or something. THat kind of ego-rush to a 17 year old teenager can drive them to do far more than just break firewalls to get kudos from their peers.

    These kind of restrictions just favour the kids who learn to use the system, instead of just fighting it on the streets like the average politico.
  6. Why I plan to homeschool my kids by MikeRT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Half of what I learned in high school, actually probably 2/3-3/4 of it, I learned online at school or on my own time. A lot of the stuff that I read was at one point or another restricted, like a lot of libertarian stuff (including the party site) was restricted because it advocated drug use.

    That's how the pea-brained morons that make most filtering software think. Yet a friend of mine would pull up porn sites like pink.com (back in the day) and laugh about it.

    I have been out of college for 6 months and so am young enough to remember high school life. It was a waste of my time. I plan to homeschool my kids because they shouldn't have to "fight the system" to get anything interesting out of it.

  7. What?!?!?! by Belial6 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What does the internet have to do with ADHD? Ohhhh... That's right. Anything we don't like kids doing must cause ADHD.