On Monday 03 October 2005 22:01, Ben Armstrong wrote: > On Mon, 2005-10-03 at 15:53 -0300, Marcela Tiznado wrote: > > - Internet filter > > Would be nice to have some panel where the parents can configure the > > livecd to conect to internet or not. Have a dansguardian or something > > to filter contents. > > Filtering has come up before. Search the list archives. I'm in favour > of supporting parents who want to do it, but not actually providing the > filtering in Debian Jr. or recommending one package over another. agreed completly, also automatic filtering basically doesn't work, anybody who thinks using automatic filtering will keep their kids from getting to pr0n sites (or whatever other kind of potentially objectional material you might define) is deluding themselve seriously ( => this should definately be stated clearly along with the pointer to packages/services providing this kind of stuff): There are basically 3 classes of filter programs: - black/whitelisting: -> works somewhat _if_ the list are built by humans, suffers from massive underblocking (no way to keep up with all new and changing sites) - auto-classification based on some 'smart' technique, usually key-words -> shown to screw up big time time and again see e.g. [3] for documentation on commercial blocking programs blocking Amnesty, Competitiors, ACLU, gay right sites, ... -> really needs strong AI to work correctly, in other words don't expect this to work anytime soon - a combination of the above: most commercial programs, most of the time this means do the auto-classification and then attempt to weed out overblocked sites (except that commercial companies seem to only do the weeding out in theory) For some numbers on overblocking (false positives), and underblocking (not blocking what should be blocked) see e.g. [1] [2]. For anecdotes about how blocking software repeatedly screws in major ways see the site of watchdog groups like [3] and [4] NOTE: watch the definition of overblocking the pro-filter side tends to use "percentage of sites visited during testing that are wrongly blocked", whereas the contra-filter side tends to use "percentage of total sites blocked that's wrongly clasified". accordingly the numbers differ from around 5% (for pro-side) to 99% (contra-side, particularly eff study linked from [1]) [1] http://www.filtereality.net/archive/badblocks.html gives pointers to several studies done, note that the one from the pro-filter side still states around 1 in every 10 blocked sites shouldn't be blocked [2] http://www.webjunction.org/do/DisplayContent?id=992 again summarizes several studies (from amongst others the DOJ), scroll to the bottem for actual numbers: underblocking reported is about 10 % (i.e. 1 in 10sites that should be blocked isn't), overblocking numbers found to depend heavily on configuration, and subject (e.g. 9% of safe sex sites were blocked on least restrictive setting, up to 50% on most restrictive setting tested) [3] http://www.peacefire.org [4] http://censorware.net/ -- Cheers, cobaco (aka Bart Cornelis) 1. Encrypted mail preferred (GPG KeyID: 0x86624ABB) 2. Plain-text mail recommended since I move html and double format mails to a low priority folder (they're mainly spam)
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