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UK ISP Adult Filters Block Sex Education Websites Allows Access To Porn

toshikodo writes "The BBC is reporting that Internet content filters being rolled out by major ISPs in the UK are failing to allow access to acceptable content, such as sex education and sexual abuse advise sites, while also still allowing access to porn. According to the article, 'TalkTalk's filter is endorsed by Mr Cameron but it failed to block 7% of the 68 pornographic websites tested by Newsnight.' The ISPs claim that it is impossible for their filters to be 100% accurate, and that they are working with their users to improve quality. I wonder how long it will be before one of these filters blocks access to the Conservative Party's website, and what will Cameron do then?"

9 of 227 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What will Cameron do then? by gagol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We let kids play ultra violent war simulation for hours and hours, but god forbid they get a glimpse of love and biology. Something is seriously wrong with this picture Mr Cameron, aside from applying technology to shape what is a social matter (mainly fear of educating properly our children).

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    Tomorrow is another day...
  2. I hate to say I told you so... by Buchenskjoll · · Score: 5, Funny

    no, actually I don't. In fact I love it. I told you so, I told you so, I told you so ...

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    -- Make America hate again!
  3. Re:No need for 100% accuracy by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These filters are completly useless against anyone actively trying to subvert them. CGI proxies, SSH tunnels, VPNs, and the plain old 'google until you find something that slips through.' Children do know these tricks, or know a friend who will show them - they pick it up at school, finding games to play during lessons. Plus it only filters websites - there is still p2p, files exchanged with friends on IM, sexually explicit zones on social platforms*. It's almost useless. The best a filter can hope for is to stop people from accidentally stumbling across porn while looking for something else - and that is something we just don't need. While certain elements of government and pressure group may believe that glimpsing a penis traumatises children for life, there is no real evidence for this. Children are just not that fragile. A better approach is to just explain to them that there are naughty pictures on the internet and they should just close the tab.

    * There's some really kinky stuff on Second Life.

  4. Does it work at all? by isorox · · Score: 5, Funny

    So I'm on BT, and like most people I've replaced the terrible "home hub" with a simple 4 router solution, 5G backbone to distribute wired around the house, single 2.4G AP for non-wired devices, OSPF to manage it all.

    It's connected upstream to the VDSL via a pppoe (username bthomehub@btbroadband.com, no password), and the central DNS proxy uses either 4.2.2.2 or 8.8.8.8 upstream.

    I've spent the morning scientifically browsing lots of porn sites, and haven't found a single one blocked. A google search for "porn" reveals the following sites on the first attempt, all work just fine.

    http://www.pornhub.com/
    http://www.youporn.com/
    http://www.redtube.com/
    http://www.porn.com/
    http://www.xnxx.com/
    http://www.perfectgirls.net/

    The search also brings up the following site
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/

    Which is blocked as being morally unwelcome in my house.

    What am I doing wrong?

    1. Re:Does it work at all? by jonbryce · · Score: 5, Informative

      The filters are default-on for new customers, but off for existing customers unless you ask for them to be switched on. Very few people will be using them at the moment.

  5. Re:What will Cameron do then? by AdamColley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's nothing to do with porn and we all know it.
    Did you notice that filter also blocks "extreme political content"?
    Who decides what's too extreme?
    They're going to ask everyone over the next year to choose filtering or no filtering, how long do you think it'll be until it's presumed consent unless you specifically ask for no filtering? How long after that anyone who wants no filtering is subject to extra GCHQ monitoring as they're considered subversive?

    Can someone please stop the country? I want to get off -.-

  6. Re:What will Cameron do then? by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We let kids play ultra violent war simulation for hours and hours, but god forbid they get a glimpse of love and biology.

    It isn't so obviously wrong. Most kids will never commit any significant act of violence, but most will have sex. If they get a warped view of violence, it won't really affect their lives. If they get a warped view of sex (and nearly all porn is a production, not real sex) then that could screw up their ability to have sexual intimacy for the rest of their lives.

    I doubt that's how the censors see it, but a broken clock is still right twice a day.

  7. Re:What will Cameron do then? by daem0n1x · · Score: 5, Insightful

    for those parents who don't teach their children about these subjects, they obviously know their children well enough to know that they should not engage in further damaging the gene pool.

    Unfortunately, the less kids know about sex, the more likely they are to spread their genes in an undesired and uncontrolled way. That's why sex education is so important and shouldn't be left to parents.

  8. Re:Internet filter does not work, news at 11 by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem is that this is exactly what "the masses" want. And they are very eager to believe the promise that this is what they get.

    They don't want to deal with "that intarnets stuff". They don't want to be responsible for little Timmy's surfing habits. Not only because little Timmy usually knows ten times what they know about computers and can easily defeat any kind of "protection" they throw in his way. Not only because he simply grew up with it, Timmy also has about ten times more time at his hands, not to mention a whole schoolyard of information on how to thwart any and all parental blocking and filtering. Plus, unlike for his parents, it's quite a bit of a status symbol for Timmy if he can evade his parents' directives, that's something you can brag about amongst your peers.

    What his parents want is that magic little box that makes all the stuff they don't want go away. Porn, predators, violence... they don't want Timmy to see that. But they do want the internet as their nanny. Just like the TV was. Why oh why can't there be some watershed on the internet? It did work on TV, didn't it?

    And no, I'm not kidding. That question actually does get asked and is a prime example of what people do NOT know about it. And why it is easy to trick them into believing any kind of snakeoil you promise them. Because they want that snakeoil to work. They want their perfect nanny. They want the internet to be just like TV was, a neat way to get rid of your kids but not be seen as a bad parent.

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