UK ISP Sky Is About To Start Censoring the Web For All of Its Customers (betanews.com)
Mark Wilson, writing for BetaNews: The UK government is on a mission to protect the young of the country from the dark recesses of the web. And by the darker recesses, what is really meant is porn. The main ISPs have long been required to block access to known piracy sites, but porn is also a concern -- for politicians, at least. As part of its bid to sanitize and censor the web, Sky -- from the Murdoch stables -- is, as of today, enabling adult content filtering by default for all new customers: Sky Broadband Shield. The company wants to "help families protect their children from inappropriate content", and in a previous experiment discovered -- unsurprisingly -- that content filtering was used by more people if it was automatically enabled.
And we criticise China?
UK is one of the WORST violators of human rights laws in Europe. Once they leave Europe, it will get WORSE. They already want to get rid of the Human Rights acts.
These are PARENTING issues, not GOVERNMENT censorship issues.
The government is not doing this. Sky is a private company. If you don't like it, you can use a different ISP, or you can just disable it. Of course, you may then need to explain to your wife why you disabled the porn filter, but that is a MARITAL issue, not a GOVERNMENT censorship issue.
Years ago I got to work with some machines running cyber sitter.
It was great at blocking things you needed to look at updates software or maybe the news?
BBS flamewar? Blocked!
The trick was it was a url and text based filter so you had to use websites that weren't in its database. And didn't have any ad's on the page that would trigger the filter.
http://www.spectacle.org/alert...
I do not believe that you can have a web filter that is both effective and not a PITA for normal daily use of things that really are no relation to what's intended to be blocked.
Minimum threshold fixed. Thanks!
For now, you can turn it off. The obvious next step is do mandate filtering for 'extreme pornography' as possession of this is already illegal in the UK. You can't turn off the piracy filter.
You also can't turn of the child abuse material filter, which is a bigger issue than you might think - the filter is generated by the IWF, about as opaque an organisation as you can get. The list is secret, the rules for what goes on the list are secret, websites are not informed when they go on the list, there is no process of appeal, and many ISPs will spoof a 404 page so the end user doesn't even realise they are being restricted.