US Congress Wants .kids TLD 108
mooneyguy writes: "Senators Edward Markey and John Shimkus have sponsored a bill that would seek creation of the .kids domain as an area that would be supposedly safe for children, as reported by CNN. Not only would this tread on ICANNs autonomy, but it also raises questions about enforcement and just how international standards of "decency" could possibly be determined. ICANN opposes the idea as being unworkable." Well, ICANN opposes the idea because they want to own the internet. But there are plenty of other reasons to oppose a "kid-friendly" domain. Kids in many nations of the world run around naked until well after puberty. Will they be able to post self-photos on .kids? While we're mentioning new TLDs, everyone associated with .biz apparently had a class-action suit filed against them, alleging the sweepstakes for initial registrations is an illegal lottery.
Kids Site taken over by pornographer. (Score:1)
Re:Makes sense to me.... (Score:1)
But that's also the problem. If schools/libraries etc. filter everything but .kids, and I think it could happen, the internet will be reduced to crap. I think kids need to be able to discover some of the bad things that exist out there. Obviously it helps to have a parent that can offer some guidance
Re:Just what we need, a .kids tld (Score:2)
I would hope the quality of moderators on slashdot wouldn't be so ignorant.
-davidu
But they've already got... (Score:1)
The issues of the other 180+ governemts notwithstanding, this made me think funny. I read the headline, and myself said the following to myself:
Then again, maybe I'm reading too much into this.
Don't oppose this! (Score:1)
Re:kids (Score:2)
Perhaops we could reorg and give
Re:Would they allow you to register... (Score:1)
It's more constructive (and more convincing) to attack the post's ideas and message than the person who posted it.
If I had mod points your post would be "flamebait"
Re:Fun for all the family (Score:2)
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Communism vs Socialism (Score:1)
BTW, of course Communism has *something* to do with brainwashing but so does every other form of government. Regard the King as intellectually superior, regard the King as God, praise the market and competition as the leveling field of society, praise human integrety and goodwill as the leveling field of society: it's all gotta be indoctrinated as an ideal somehow which can be equated with "brainwashing".
Re:Makes sense to me.... (Score:1)
I dunno, is that anything like the half-hour commercials for the Transformers, G.I. Joe, and He-Man that I watched as a kid? Not that I didn't love them all, though. Too bad they didn't have any Robotech toys at the time (well, except that one Transformer) or I totally would have bought all of them.
In retrospect I'm surprised that the Star Wars toys didn't spawn their own animated series. Heck, I had Boba Fett Underoos, surely a TV show would be less exploitative than that :)
Re:.kids would be as kidfriendly as . . . (Score:1)
To play the Devil's advocate for a moment - any registrar could just boot offenders once they receive and investigate complaints. As long as that oversight was made a requirement for the domain registration, it wouldn't be that tough to enforce on an as-needed basis.
My main reaction to this article: I can't wait until congress finds out exactly how intractable ICANN is, and charters its own root servers. Who would have thought that the biggest boost to the alternate DNS system would be the U.S. Government :) Of course, if they get NSI/Verisign to run it then we're not much better off...
Re:.xxx? (Score:1)
Umm, shouldn't that be cum?
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Only problem I see (Score:3)
Body shame. (Score:2)
A lot of the time, the point of prohibiting something is to make it _more_ desirable - personally, I believe this applies to nudity as well - if you spend some time in a naturist area, you quickly become desensitized.
I'm all for repealing archaic "decency" laws based on obsolete judeo-christian weirdness - if anyone was allowed get naked as and when they feel like it, the novelty would soon wear off.... and body shame is learnt by children, it's not natural, or upon any sensible analysis, healthy - I mean, your body is you, and being permanently ashamed of yourself is psychologically damaging, I'd say...
After all, clothes have their uses - warmth, decoration, etc... no need to mandate them, though.
.xxx? (Score:2)
Filtering all the
And don't come and tell me porn is free speech, pleeeeze.
/max
Re:.xxx? (Score:1)
if the
I do think porn is a type of free action and free speech, and as such (pedofiles, and beastiality excluded) should not be restricted as such. But having the
Plus it would save unsuspecting people at work (from likes of whitehouse.com).
Re:.xxx? (Score:1)
I like the
Re:porn is... (Score:1)
What about *.er.xxx for erotica, *.art.xxx, *.hc.porn for hardcore, and even
the way
And these places where the kids run naked (Score:1)
And their own personal websites?
Methinks Michael [spectacle.org] my just be trying to make up stupid reasonings. Yes, there are many things to think about in this idea that other people brought up (who and how would this be regulated by being one), but Michael's complaint is just stupid.
goatsecx.for.kids? (Score:3)
Re:I never thought the say would come... (Score:1)
However, you bring up an intersting question. What is and is not appropriate for children? I can imagine a website that discusses the changes that occur during puberty. This would definately be relavent to kids, but some parents wouldn't want their children to see this. What about the "gay" Teletubbie or religion?
I think it would be fairly easy to make a
Re:Fun for all the family (Score:1)
----
If you have to reach... (Score:1)
Kids in many nations of the world run around naked until well after puberty.
then you need to evaluate why you really oppose something. Even if it's true, it's such a minor concern. Could you really go before a congressional committee and say "What about all of the naked children of the world who will be excluded from this domain?"
There are numerous other arguments against this that do not reference naked children and are a bit more obvious/important. What about varying levels of maturity among children? Should thirteen year olds be restricted to content that is appropriate for six year olds because their school's content software only allows .kids domains? Will it privilege religious content (often seen as inherently good) over content that is more controversial or socially critical simply to shield children from complex issues?
Re:I have a better idea... (Score:2)
Doug
Re:Fun for all the family (Score:2)
Ok, I think I have a stumper for you all:
http://www.annegeddes.com
Re:Need parent involvement, not .kids domain (Score:1)
I just tried sticking "curve balls" and "curve ball" in google and there was zero porn at least on the first page. Some search engines do have a family filter anyway. I think you typically really have to go looking for porn to find it.
Re:.xxx? (Score:2)
I'm sorry, Max, but it is..
Re:MORE GREAT IDEAS (Score:1)
The same way you've been brainwashed by anti-communist propaganda?
Re:naked? (Score:1)
Makes sense to me.... (Score:1)
On the flip-side, how long do you think it will be before people wanting to target-market to children will be registering
Heh (Score:1)
nambla.kids
i.hate.my.kids
www.slashdot.kids
www.abused.kids
And....
www.new.kids
(I love Joey!!!)
porn is... (Score:2)
However, it seems that you could in fact codify what sorts of images would be allowed only on .xxx sites, just as almost every country in the world has rules for what types of sexual content can be purchased from magazine stands as opposed to adult-only venues.
It seems that this sort of segregation would make everyone happy. Finally, the online porn industry could come out of the closet, so to speak. Imagine an entire domain devoted to porn. Those who want some control over what their children see (thanks, let's not have Junior checking out pix of goatsex just yet), could much more easily apply filtering that would eliminate the most aggressively obscene material.
It's not censorship, it's not elimination of free speech. It's striking a balance between my desire to get porn on demand, and your desire to keep your kids from being relentlessly exposed to porn.
dibs on (Score:1)
Re:Just what we need, a .kids tld (Score:2)
nuf sed
And who is the US Congress? (Score:2)
Re:CAUTION:Flamey (Score:1)
US scientists built the internet.
They may have built the arpanet, but there have been non-US nodes on the 'net since at least the early '80s.
US companies and individuals provided 99% of the content, shopping, and entertainment on the internet just until this year.
ROFL!
US companies manufacture most of the hardware involved, wrote all of the software involved...
A lot of hardware is manufactured in asia, and software is written pretty much everywhere, since you are on
Please show me some real stats to back this claim up and I'll believe you.
/Mikael Jacobson
"But surely we won't be still stuck with Linux in 25 years!?"
Other TLD's kicked arround DC.... (Score:1)
from the home office....
Re:Fun for all the family (Score:1)
Re:Body shame. (Score:1)
Also, "pictures of naked children" and "child pornography" are two separate entities. Pictures of naked children are sold in your local Barnes-and-Noble -- check out the "Photography" section. Please don't label any nudity as obscene and offensive right away -- most non-Americans treat nudity very differently and have a by far healthier attitude towards it.
If some parent in, say, Italy posts pictures of his young kids taking a bath, that would not be even remotely considered pornographic. In fact, the idea itself would be considered preposterous if not downward offensive to the parent. Please don't judge everything by the US standards. The world is a big place and hang-ups of one country are out of place in many others.
It sounds like this whole idea is already quite... (Score:2)
Of course, just my 1/50$.
Re:Enforcable? (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5)
Re:Would they allow you to register... (Score:1)
Re:I have a better idea... (Score:2)
But this assumes that the .kids domain would use the same kind of "no questions asked" registration policy that's in place for .com etc. That's not necessarily the case, though. They could as easily require each registrant to submit a brief description of what was on their site, have a person check the description to make sure that it was "kid safe", and revoke registrations for sites that either violated their description (so that you couldn't register nambla.kids as a Barney site) or the general requirements for all .kids sites (i.e. no nudity, no discussion of sex, etc.) Anyone could lodge a complaint with registrar.kids if they felt that a site was inappropriate. It wouldn't necessarily keep nambla.kids from existing temporarily, but as long as the policy was well spelled out in advance it would give them justification for shutting the site down as soon as it published anything "kid unfriendly".
This, IMO, should be one of the goals of all new TLDs. They should have a clearly stated policy regarding who should be allowed to register, and should block and/or revoke the registrations of sites that violate that policy. Thus they could have policies like one domain per person or organization, must not have the same second name under a different TLD, must not be the trademark holder (for .sucks), etc. If .kids had such a clear policy on what was and wasn't allowed, they could do a pretty good job of ensuring that their domains were consistently appropriate for kids.
I don't see how congress is an authority on this (Score:1)
Let's face it, the internet is an international network, not something made by US americans for US americans (Yes, you are guessing right, I am not american).
So I really don't think that the US congress should have any saying or legislative powers whatsoever as to which TLDs exist and which do not. Because if they should, every other government on planet earth should be allowed to do the same. Let the ICANN be the global consensus authority it should be, for that's what is necessary, a consensus.
maybe you're right legally, but morally? (Score:1)
I know, but as you say, it was made public, later. And the web was actually developed in Switzerland, and released to the public. I don't think it matters where things were developed as long as they are officially made publicly available later.
I'm sure if you read through the charter, you'll see it all in black and white
Can't seem find their charter on the site right now, but their fact sheet states that: ICANN has been recognized by the U.S. and other governments as the global consensus entity to coordinate the technical management of the Internet's domain name system, the allocation of IP address space, the assignment of protocol parameters, and the management of the root server system..
Recognizing them as the consensus entity != interfering with their decisions in my mind ... but legally, you might be right ...
kids (Score:1)
Maybe we shuld use this domain to uphold the same level of caution as a PBS show. I.E. If it wouldn't make it to PBS, then It can't be on the
where not talking about censorship so much as a place children can surf and there parent can be aware of what to expect.
by making a domain a parent can get a piece of software that blocks all non
by setting standards for this ONE domain will allow a place for children be surf where there are 'rules' governing content.
If some one doesn't like it, they can post there content on another TLD, and still be heard.
since 'adult entertainment' is so prevailent on the web, It is time for something like this. I used a very popular search engine, added -sex to my search criteria, and while it filtered most of the adult site, the search engine displayed very explicit ads for sex sites/merchindise. I really don't want my 10 year old to stumble onto some guy getting blown when he does a search on blow guns. I feel having ONE TLD designed with conservitive standard isn't such a bad thing.
I have for years been an advocate of a
Re:I Oppose (Score:1)
ONE specific domain, with a strict set of rules would allow parents to filter other TLDs. we're not talking about a set of child laws to govern all sites, we're talking about a specific TLD.
The other way is to not let them use a computer, which is a shame, because there is good information, and good kid site they couldn't access.
Re:.kids would be as kidfriendly as . . . (Score:1)
Re:Need parent involvement, not .kids domain (Score:1)
standards - use US standards for PBS. they will be the most conservitive, which is what many parents(yes, even european ones) are looking for. If you have something that doesn't fit there are other TLDs you can use.
I don't want my 10 year old going to what seems like a legitimaent site, only to be redirected to an adult themed site, or see some pop-up with depict adult entertainment. having a specific TLD will allow me to filter all non
I do not take the path of least resistance, but if my son want to find out why a curve balls curves I don't won't pop-ups depicted adult themes. what do you think the results will be for the search criteria "curves ball" will be?
I don't let the tv 'babysit' my kids, but its nice to know I can go to the bathroom without the fear that there going to see a commercial that depictes a 'teen' with sperm running down her face.
Re:kids (Score:1)
I don't let the tv 'babysit' my kids, but its nice to know I can go to the bathroom without the fear that there going to see a commercial that depictes a 'teen' with sperm running down her face.
Re:who decides what's appropriate? (Score:1)
1)I would think that we could start by using the same guidline that PBS uses. they seem to have been able to deal with this fairly well.
2)perhaps there should be a panel for just this. I wouldn't mind a panel that monitored this activity on this ONE domain.
3) web site owners would be responsible to remove content that other may post that do not fall within the kids safe parameters. They have to do it say within 24 hours of it being reported or pay a fine.
I wan't my son to be able to type in "Curve Ball" for search criteria and have a reasonable expectation that the returns will be about baseball and not adult themed material.
as far as what age is appropriete, that would be up to the parents. If a parent can have the choice to filter out, or have there isp filter out, all non
just to make it clear, I would scream andd shout and protest if these where standards applied to the whole net, but i'm talking aboiut only ONE TLS
I don't let the tv 'babysit' my kids, but its nice to know I can go to the bathroom without the fear that there going to see a commercial that depictes a 'teen' with sperm running down her face.
id you don't like what
Just what we need, a .kids tld (Score:1)
Re:MORE GREAT IDEAS (Score:1)
I don't know about you, but I don't really think that wearing German chancellors on my head would add to my safety.
naked? (Score:2)
News to me...
Need parent involvement, not .kids domain (Score:5)
More to the point, the whole idea of a "safe internet" basically sounds to me like parents who don't want to take the trouble to educate their kid what stuff to avoid and how to handle what they may inadvertantly run into. Too young? Then what are they doing on a computer? I have issues with young kids on computers at all (same with TV) but that's another post. If you are going to let your kid on the internet, make it a family activity. Get involved. Don't use the computer as a substitute for meaningful time with your kids. That's just begging for trouble, and
Re:.xxx? (Score:2)
Web != Internet (Score:1)
Though I don't like them all that much (don't hate them either) I kinda feel sorry for ICANN. The world thinks they're too allied with the US and US government, and our government thinks they're not like a rubber stamp enough.
new domain (Score:1)
J
Re:Fun for all the family (Score:1)
I mean, most of the articles on
Kalrand
-The Voice of Reason
Re:MORE GREAT IDEAS (Score:2)
Ok - you had me until that. You do understand that it is Government Propaganda (McCartyism) that has led you to *not* understand what Communism is about. Communism has nothing to do with brainwashing - I would argue Capitalism actually *brainwashes* via advertising and marketing... the proof is in the Unbridled Consumption that occurs in the American Masses..... and their arent Evil, Godless, Commies(TM) are they?
Americans confuse Fascism with Communism - one is an economic system, the other a method of government...
Re:Enforcable? (Score:2)
The following will be immediately approved:
disney.kids
pepsi.kids
nike.kids
rep ublican.kids
democrat.kids
toys-r-us.kids
barbi e.kids
nsync.kids
makeup.kids
shopping.kids
ww wf.kids
The following, if administered in the US, will not:
socialist.kids
communist.kids
consumerism. kids
greenpeace.kids
sweatshop.kids
I would not want any of *my* children to be exposed to the first list, the second list is what my children should spend their time learning about...*
*outside of republican/democrat.kids - balanced arguments are necessary, what *.kids will become is a wasteland of Consumerism and Advertising...
Maybe if they declared *.kids a 'Trademark' or 'Copyright' free place, only for altruists and people intending on educating or entertaining, without any nefarious marketing ploys; "How many KoKa-Kola(TM)brand Soda Cans does Johnny have?"
Re:Why not use kids.us (Score:1)
I like national TLDs. They give nation-level control over these sorts of ideas. The US should keep .us, and if the US decides it wants to put a .kids under that, then great.
Of course, I believe all the gTLDs should probably be subsumed under nation-level TLDs: .com.us , .co.uk , .biz.us , .info.ru , etc.
We need fewer TLDs, not more. More TLDs are just a way for registrars to cash in by forcing companies to buy their trademarked name dot-whatever to protect their trademarks.
Fewer TLDs and a firm sense of what jurisdiction applies to each sure would make dispute resolution easier.
.kids would be as kidfriendly as . . . (Score:2)
.kids would be to "kidfriendly" as . . .
.org is to "ONLY" non-profits (see: Andover)
.net is only for web services, ISPs or the like
There is NO way that a registrar could constantly monitor the content on a whole TLD. Of course URLs like hardcoreporn.kids wont be allowed to go through, but I could register sesamestreet.kids and then turn it into a porn site as soon as ICANN (or NS or whoever runs this garbled mess of a hierarchy) turns their head.
On top of that, who are we kidding? ICANN wont enact new TLDs as long as they're in control. How many years have we seen "NEW TLD!" headlines. Anyone see any new ones besides country codes yet?
I didn't think so
Re:Makes sense to me.... (Score:2)
Re:naked? (Score:2)
Maybe they could work up something with that hand-cranked Web server from the other day...
Re:kids (Score:2)
And of course, some people [falwell.com] have found controversy even in the kids' programming.
Who gets a .kids domain? (Score:1)
In addition to the (very real) concerns about how to set some sort of universal standard, I see another problem. Wouldn't this also be a magnet for somebody wanting to prey on kids? With the number of people that would want to get an address in this domain, nobody could possibly monitor all the sites too closely. A predator could set up an initially innocuous-seeming site, and then use it as bait.
incorrect (Score:2)
In the case of .edu, there's already this accreditation infrastructure in place. Who would accredit "kid-friendly" sites, and how would they accomplish that?
who decides what's appropriate? (Score:4)
First of all, safe for what age? Material that's perfectly reasonable for a 13-year-old might be inappropriate for a 7-year-old.
Secondly, "safe" is a gray area to begin with. If the goal of this legislation is to shield kids from porn, what qualifies as porn? Is a National Geographic picture of Australian aboriginals who aren't wearing any clothes off limits simply because it depicts nudity? What about a discussion of the reproductive behavior of pandas at the National Zoo?
Third, what standards does this law intend to place on areas outside of sex? Is foul language off limits? (If so, how foul is foul? There's a big difference between, say, "c--t" or "f--k" and "damn".) What about material on drugs/alcohol, violence, firearms, racial issues, religion, evolution, or anything else that might be considered controversial? Will there be a "kid-safe panel" who gets to decide if a site devoted to discussion of, say, the Holocaust falls outside the realm of "kid-safe"? How about a site that discusses "The Catcher in the Rye" or "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" -- both the kind of things that some school systems believe kids should get exposed to, and others believe are cause for censorship.
Some might argue this is just doing for the Web what the MPAA does for movies, but Web sites aren't like movies -- they change all the time, they have input from other users, etc. Who would be responsible for enforcing these standards on an ongoing basis?
What the hell?????? (Score:1)
Standard use, fine. Law? WTF??
I never thought the say would come... (Score:2)
All it does it create a false sense of security and the moment an enterprising company wants to do something that walks that thin line of decency the question becomes, who's job would it be to manage it?
You could always give some company like the Childrens Television Workshop [sesameworkshop.org] control over that TLD and let them manage the content restrictions. Don't get me wrong. I don't think this would be a good idea, just the only way a safe
--CTH
--
house membership does not a senator make (Score:1)
edward markey is a democrat from massachusetts.
john shimkus is a republican from illinois.
three cheers for bipartianship--or more properly--getting screwed by both sides.
legislated safety... (Score:1)
Re:Fun for all the family (Score:1)
Rob's Page (left side menu),
then AnimeFu (on right column),
then AnimeNation (left side menu),
then Links (top menu),
then Hentai (top right paragraph under Misc),
then click the top advertisement (Freethought).
6 clicks to pr0n! Ok, anime pr0n, but pr0n nonetheless. Can anyone do better?
Already been tried (Score:1)
Re:Fun for all the family (Score:1)
Fun for all the family (Score:5)
What we did was we went to a "Safe" page, and the aim was to get to a pr0n page within 7 clicks. These clicks had to be repeatable, all within the HTML document window, and no typing was allowed.
The only page that has beaten us so far was the home page of the Prime Minister of New Zealand - this page has disappeared now cause we have a new PM.
Great Idea, But...... (Score:1)
Sure, it is a terrific idea for there to be a known safe place for all kids to go, where they would not be exposed to adult themed material. And, this would work, if there was one overarching managing body for the entire Internet... BUT THERE ISN'T! ICANN, despite their name, can't. The US Government CERTAINLY can't do it (even as much as they'd like too).
There is never going to be any group/committee/whatever who approves everything on the Internet. And nobody in their right mind would want that anyway.
"Yeah, I'd love to get that web site posted... just let me submit it to the *insert governing body here* and hopefully they'll approve it and it will be up by the end of the month..."
The Internet is the final frontier. It's the high-tech wild west. Its up for grabs and you simply can't rely on the goodness and community warm fuzzies of all its users. There will always be pervs soliciting kids on line. There will always be companies marketing directly to those oh-so-young-and-impressional future buyers. That is, unless, some sort of better technology (Internet2 for example?) comes along.
My $0.02
Jason
Re:naked? (Score:2)
Really, this isn't special knowledge. If you've taken an anthropology course you've seen nekkid dark-skinned pre-teens.
Re:Makes sense to me.... (Score:2)
Re:Just what we need, a .kids tld (Score:2)
Before you mod this OT: A kid [dictionary.com] is a young goat. Thus the humor.
I Oppose (Score:5)
Fucking Americans (Score:1)
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PORN! (Score:1)
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Re:Would they allow you to register... (Score:1)
Two words: (Score:3)
Re:So how is .kids any different than .k12.nn.us? (Score:2)
Oh, yeah, one more thing: if you have the rights to "foo-bar-baz.us", then you have the rights to "foobarbaz.us" and all other reasonable variants.
Enforcable? (Score:1)
Seriously, though, how are they going to enforce the "kid-friendly" content of the sites that register for a domain? If it gets popular enough, they will probably have to install some kind of censorware like NetNanny or CyberSitter, and we all know how well that works out...
I have a better idea... (Score:4)
While I don't really have a problem with a .kids domain, and while I like the idea of kids having a "safe" place to surf, I think that this can't possibly be safe from "pollution" of one form or another. I can see NAMBLA registering nambla.kids. The average parent would still be smart to run internet filters even on those domains.
But the best idea I've heard so far is simply to place the family computer in the living room.
Oh wait I forgot, that would require supervision.
I don't know... (Score:1)
CAUTION:Flamey (Score:1)
Re:"Safe for children" is a ploy (Score:1)
I can see it now... (Score:1)
Re:MORE GREAT IDEAS (Score:1)
MORE GREAT IDEAS (Score:2)
Ban all substances that aren't safe to consume in huge amounts
Ban all products small enough to fit in your mouth (kids could choke!)
Helmuts must be worn at all times. Don't you read studies? Helmust save lives - statistics prove that!
No mature ideas should be expressed that might reach a child (through a deviant 3rd party)
Child-proof every appliance and tool in your home, including kitchen knives and office supplies that could be used as weapons. Weapons are bad, remember, not the person who misuses them.
We need "Education Camps" where children go to be brain washed by feel-good communist propaganda... (Oh wait we have that - they're called schools)
The future holds even more promise. Someday you'll be able to read your childs' thoughts. Any contempt or wrongful thinking can then be smack out of them! That'll be great for keeping them moral and clean until you let them go. Hell, who says you have to let them go at all? Keep them in perpetual fear of sin their whole lives, hating their own feelings, demeaning any bad thoughts or ideas they might get from somewhere other than you. Guilt is the best tool of all - make them feel guilty for existing.
Be patronizing. Be condescending. Be feared, not loved.
Only then will you be a good parent.
Well now! (Score:1)
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Re:.xxx? (Score:1)
And as long as we're there, why not reserve a subnet for pr0n when IPv6 comes? And also subnets for each country. That ought to make it easy enough to block French people from buying nazi stuff. Thoughts on that, anybody?
"Safe for children" is a ploy (Score:2)
Unfortunately, these same questions just keep coming up because they are a natural part of any attempt to restrict information "to protect the children." It's a twofold question: who watches the watchdogs, and who trains them? And it defies any easy solution, because every parent and every citizen has their own thoughts on how other people should be raising their kids.
Gee, maybe censorship isn't the right solution. It sure seems out of place in such a diverse nation. Maybe all we need is some good parenting instead. But that's never going to happen...
My 2c.
-all dead homiez
Re:Get real (Score:2)
you miss the point.
If parents just hear "oh, the
The point you're missing is that since children will be more likely to have unsupervised access to