Re: Just say NYET to kneejerking
In message <9407291348.AA04027@snark.imsi.com> perry@imsi.com writes:
Graham Toal says:
I must admit that I'm disappointed. I figured that I would take some hits, but for people to only scan a post before reaching for the lighter...
Don't be such a condescending shit. We read your post clearly enough, thank you very much. Typical control-freak crap. If you want your little xtian kids to be namby-pamby'd on the net,
I believe Graham is being rather rude.
Agreed. You may love sailing and decide to live near a busy harbor. But if you have children, you will probably want low fences between them and the water. When they get older and have better judgement and motor control, they will also be able to step over the low fence. This is the way that most human beings handle their children, with restrictions that disappear gradually as the children grow up. The Internet is a wild and exciting place. You want your children to get to know it. But you would also like a way to build little fences between them and some things that they are just too young to deal with. How do you do it? -- +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Jim Dixon<jdd@aiki.demon.co.uk> | Compuserve: 100114,1027 | |AIKI Parallel Systems Ltd + parallel processing hardware & software design| | voice +44 272 291 316 | fax +44 272 272 015 | +-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
jdd@aiki.demon.co.uk (Jim Dixon) writes:
In message <9407291348.AA04027@snark.imsi.com> perry@imsi.com writes:
Graham Toal says:
I must admit that I'm disappointed. I figured that I would take some hits, but for people to only scan a post before reaching for the lighter...
Don't be such a condescending shit. We read your post clearly enough, thank you very much. Typical control-freak crap. If you want your little xtian kids to be namby-pamby'd on the net,
I believe Graham is being rather rude.
Agreed. You may love sailing and decide to live near a busy harbor. But if you have children, you will probably want low fences between them and the water. When they get older and have better judgement and motor control, they will also be able to step over the low fence. This is the way that most human beings handle their children, with restrictions that disappear gradually as the children grow up.
The Internet is a wild and exciting place. You want your children to get to know it. But you would also like a way to build little fences between them and some things that they are just too young to deal with. How do you do it?
I don't guess I rightly care how you raise your kids as long as you don't to interfere with what I want to do in the process. if you don't have sufficient authority over your children to prevent them from doing that which you do not want them to do, sorry, this is not my problem. josh
Jim Dixon: | The Internet is a wild and exciting place. You want your children to | get to know it. But you would also like a way to build little fences | between them and some things that they are just too young to deal with. | How do you do it? Find a group of like minded parents. Join resources together, and hire someone to write code to do digital reputations & ratings systems. Encourage people to 'rate' their postings as G, PG, PG-13, R or XXX. (This is the American 'voluntary' movie rating system to indicate the content of the movies.) Then hack up a newsreader/web browser to only connect to those systems with a reputation behind them and also advertised as whatever level of violence/sexuality/religiousity/communism that you define as acceptable for your kids. This requires no law, no coersion. All the tough thinking work has been done, in terms of creting digital reputations schemes. Now, all that needs to be done is implementation. If you do it well, and create a scheme that allows for multiple webs of trust, multiple user defined ratings systems, etc, then coincidentally, you will have created an infrastructure that allows for all sorts of smart filtering. Adam -- Adam Shostack adam@bwh.harvard.edu Politics. From the greek "poly," meaning many, and ticks, a small, annoying bloodsucker.
participants (3)
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Adam Shostack -
jdd@aiki.demon.co.uk -
joshua geller