EC Tests Show Windows Vista Is Above Average — At Blocking Content
littlekorea writes "Microsoft's much-maligned Vista operating system has been named in the top three of 26 tools tested by the European Commission to filter out web content deemed inappropriate for children. The EC tests found that none of the 26 products enjoyed a 100 percent success rate, failing to block over one in five adult sites. It also found that few tools could overcome the workarounds available through cache or translation sites."
I run 6 windows CE and Me machines at home and they are great for keeping my kids safe.
Once its used up your allowance nothing gets past it at all.
...is Windows 7.
Seriously, I get a solid 5 fps more in vista with the exact same settings, and that's on games where the sweet spot is 'tight' like GTAIV. My free copy of 7 sits unused.
Ok, so this is a bit off topic, but why did everyone think 7 was better. I just can't figure it out.
As long as you aren't ready to let your kid run free on the internet and see all there is to see, use white-lists. Anything else is doomed to fail.
Disconnect from the internet, only way to get 100% success rate
"OpenDNS gives you the option to block dozens of categories on your networks, for free. From social networking to job sites, from gambling to video sharing, from webmail to alcohol and more: with OpenDNS, you make the choice about what's available on your network" link
Nothing like an article that is light on details that comments related to said article start off with a flamewar.
I just love the ingerity of the cited sources around here.
...it crashes every time you try to visit a website.
Very interesting area. Before people start saying that parents need to take control themselves (instead of letting software do their job for them), I as a parent of a seven year old believe I should do both. Be around to help, as well as give my daughter freedom and independence. She's not daft, but there is always the chance (especially on flash-games type sites) for interesting popups to... diversify her web and life experience. I use k9 filtering to help avoid this sort of thing. Wow, this almost sounds like a customer testimonial, sorry....
Anway, the article sadly has a duff link in it. The report's *really* at:
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/sip/projects/filter_label/sip_bench2/index_en.htm
The full report PDF is:
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/sip/docs/sip_bench2_results/report_jan11.pdf
See also:
http://www.yprt.eu/sip/
Oh arse
Hang on, so a superseded, widely meh-rated / derided OS, is the key to web-filtering? As the saying goes, might as well buy a jumbo jet for the peanuts...
I experienced content not being available due to IE bugs and/or non compliance (CSS, cookies, SSL problems), and now this would be considered a feature :p
Marketing is awesome \o/
Coming soon to Firefox 4: *NEW FEATURE* Content blocking, 100% effective at blocking nasty content. Disables CSS2 and CSS3 support and replaces it with a much safer presentation layer built on Java Swing (via ActiveX and VBScript) and Flash Player. Now you can rest assured that the only pages you'll ever see are your safe and friendly ultra-secure 128bit RC4 encrypted yourbanknamespeltwrong.com and falsebook.com favourites.
<american>OMFG it's the European Socialist Commission (see what I did there?). They have no right to evaluate good capitalist American products. I've always known that Vista is waaaay below average in content blocking.</american>
Yah, nothing gets past the Vista black screen...
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
It looks like they're only considering options that install into a browsing computer. That leaves some highly-rated solutions like Dan's Guardian off the list.
This is the comparison I am reviewing. I'm really becoming a member of the Good Enough club lately. Not so sure why the EC didn't review Windows 7 in that study but oh well..
For ideological reasons I am waiting for Windows 8. Vista, fine, it's gone. 7 was "Fix Vista". So to me that leaves Windows 8 to "do something" interesting to see if it can really knock XP off the perch in a Tech World Agrees manner.
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
"Microsoft's much-maligned Vista operating system has been named in the top three of 26 tools tested by the European Commission to filter out web content deemed inappropriate for children." ..."And named the top tool tested to filter out any product not owned by Microsoft."
Given that the test included only two operating systems and the other one (MAC-OS) beat Vista this is hardly a result to be proud of. Its a bit like saying you compared a Tata Nano, a Volkwagen Golf and a load of other forms of transport for motorway cruising (push-bikes, wheelbarrows, etc) and the Tata Namo came in the top 3.
As someone who espoused the virtues of protecting your children online with the proper tools and configuring them, without barring them from using the computer, I found that Windows Vista made a huge leap forward in terms of integrating online safety with an operating system. Sadly, with Windows 7, Microsoft removed this integration from the OS, removed some abilities and made it a downloadable aspect of Windows Live Essentials while downgrading it's functionality.
With a properly configured Windows Vista machine, I could confidently allow an 8 year old child to browse the internet unmonitored as there was no way they could see anything they weren't supposed to, even accidentally. The Windows 7 downloadable Family Safety has many issues which has sadly removed my confidence in the product.
Really.
Since the computer is basically unusable with Vista, all pernicious web content is unaccessible from it. Along with the rest.
But yeah, our children are safe.
Replacing your computer with a big rock on your desk also works as a great web filter.
I'd like to see some proof that the slow copy in Vista (which was fixed before sp1) was caused by a DRM bug.
I've never heard of Windows not recognizing a USB keyboard. Why don't you cite the hardware or we'll assume you are just trolling for Linux
but I realize Slashdot isn't interested in benchmarks when it comes to taking cheap shots at M$. Let's try to get in a few more Vista bashes while we can.
We both agree on "developing the skills". Let's say there's two entirely different classes of skills. One skill level is much like muscle memory. It's that Tyrrany of Choice problem, which a child is less equipped to handle. He needs raw time just to sign on to KidMessenger and just chatter without every session being monitored by BigParents.
Then a couple of years later, say age 12, they get to peek at the Grownup Internet which STILL has KidMessenger, and a lot of L33t stuff ... and a lot of sharks. So then they can have a Lesson on Skills Using the Adult Net. Then they can go back to their nice cozy Kid System for another week.
When they finally get "Parental Say So" to the Adult Net, they'll have had time to process risk evaluating clicks.
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine