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FC: Americans overwhelmingly want Net-filters in schools
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Wed, 18 Oct 2000 11:57:13 -0400
[David Burt is a longtime filtering advocate and current employee of a
filtering company. He might even be right: The geek community is certainly
aware of filtering software's problems (and has been for well over four
years, c.f.
http://www.eff.org/pub/Publications/Declan_McCullagh/cwd.keys.to.the.kingdom.0796.article
and efforts by groups like ifea.net). But that doesn't seem to have had
much of an effect -- or perhaps non-tech parents weigh the costs and
benefits of the blocking-sw equation differently. --Declan]
**********
From: "David Burt" <dburt () n2h2 com>
To: "Declan McCullagh" <declan () well com>
Subject: 92% support filters in schools
Date: Wed, 18 Oct 2000 08:46:20 -0700
Amazing, just amazing. A massive, 3-year dis-information campaign that
"filters simply don't work" by the free speech groups and their allies
appears to have had *no effect at all* on public perceptions.
October 18, 2000
Survey Finds Support for School Filters
By REBECCA S. WEINER
<http://www.nytimes.com/2000/10/18/technology/18EDUCATION.html>http://www.nytimes.com/2000/10/18/technology/18EDUCATION.html
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The overwhelming majority of Americans say schools should install filters
to block students from accessing pornography and hate speech, according to
a new national survey commissioned by the Digital Media Forum.
Ninety-two percent said pornography should be blocked on school computers,
while 79 percent said filters should be used to bar hate speech, the survey
of 1,900 individuals showed.
Filtering software and services block pre-selected Web sites with certain
characteristics, such as pornography, from an individual user's Internet
account. Some schools set up systems in which students and teachers are
given different levels of access depending on age appropriateness. And
companies like America Online offer software to its subscribers that
parents can use to block their children from accessing inappropriate
material online.
"The vast majority seem to accept filtering as a way of school life," said
Andy Carvin, senior associate at Benton Foundation's Communications Policy
Practice The Washington, D.C.-based foundation is a member of the Digital
Media Forum, a consortium of six public interest and consumer groups
interested in media policy.
While 86 percent of the individuals surveyed this summer said they believe
the Internet would help their children learn more, and 95 percent said the
Internet is vital for developing work skills, there is still some
trepidation about what materials students can access via the medium.
Seventy-six percent of respondents said "inappropriate material" makes it
more difficult to adopt the Internet in schools.
[...]
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| David Burt, Marketing Research Manager dburt () n2h2 com http://www.n2h2.com/ |
| Intelligent Technologies For A Safe and Productive Internet |
|| Phone 206 892-1130 Fax: 509 271-4226 |
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