(28-07-2014 21:56 )admiral decker Wrote: (28-07-2014 21:18 )eccles Wrote: As for whitelisting specific sites, forget it. blah blah blah
On the contrary, I've just checked my Talktalk account and I find that it does allow whitelisting. ...
Happy to be proved wrong, perhaps TalkTalk offer a more sophisticated service. Interesting that they are so widely separated from the pack when it comes to take up too, 36% compared to less than 10% for the rest.
Elgars product might be a bundled piece of software rather than the mandatory control that Cameron forced ISPs to adopt. These things come and go, and are often customised and combined with antivirus and spam filters, but are popular with people who are nervous about using the internet - I know several families in that category.
Camerons one is network level and applies to anything using the connection to access HTML (web pages) - PC, laptop, Mac, phone, tablet, games consoles, Raspberry Pi, Arduino - any type of device even if it cant run Windows, even a smart TV.
Ofcoms report says Virgin has no customisation options, its on or off, TalkTalk has 9 categories, Sky 10 and BT 16. BT apparently has an option to turn off controls for one hour or always trust a specific site.
Sky say they receive 110 reports a month from customers about misclassified sites, with an average of 27 sites a month accepted as miscategorised. (They dont say in which direction).
The BT "unavoidable choice" box gives 2 1/2 times more space to I Want Parental Controls than No Thanks. If that were an election ballot form - say for Scottish independence - it would be ruled biased and banned. People even obsess about which option comes first (isnt No before Yes when alphabetic order is used?).
Sky gives equal prominence.
I doubt there are detailed stats on customers age, gender and family make up by option selected, but Ofcom say each ISPs customer base differs from the national average. (Is this stating stating the b****ing obvious? Internet takeup among the over 70s is lower than the national average.) The national average is 40% of homes do not have resident children. BT estimated 75% of their customers do not have children under 18. Sky estimated above 60% do not have children. No figures were given for TalkTalk or Virgin. (Ofcom presents the figures the other way round, making direct comparison less easy).
So far as I can see the research does not ask why parents have not implemented parental filters, apart from a vague unquantified suggestion that parents might use other tools. It does not even establish how many parents are among the customer base. This is despite the Culture Secretary Maria Miller asking Ofcom for research into this "
I would also like ... as far as it is available, any research into why parents may chose not to apply parental control tools". (OK that referred to the 1st report, not the 2nd, and says so far as it is available, but you get my drift.)
No hint that parents might not want them, or not might want to exercise their own discretion instead of surrendering control to some anonymous remote censor that is tacitly Government approved.
(Incorrect use of the word "may" by the way. If anyone is responsible for correct use of English language it is the Culture Secretary. The reason parents may chose not to apply filters is that the option exists. She means why.)
Some of the porn filters include sites that contain sex toys, which might block Anne Summers, despite it not being a registered Sex Shop. Some block erotic stories and textual descriptions of sexual acts, that could conceivably block any online bookseller offering excerpts from 50 Shades Of Grey, though that is just speculation.
http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binarie...ures_2.pdf - in the Internet section.
There has been very little comment in the press that Cameron forced this through by dikdat. Not a single word of Parliamentary discussion. No law passed. No scrutiny by our elected representatives. Not even an Order In Council. Its the kind of authority that other well known democrat, Putin, wields. He dislikes. He orders. It gets blocked.