Word: surfwatch
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Last week's ruling puts responsibility for determining what children may see on the Internet squarely in the hands of parents and teachers. Several software products, including SurfWatch, Cyber Patrol and Net Nanny, allow adults to screen content on their home PCs, while most of the large online providers offer built-in "parental controls" or free screening software. But computer programs don't obviate the need for adult supervision. Even SurfWatch, which pays graduate students to troll the Internet in search of offensive material, promises only 90% effectiveness. And to achieve that, its software filters must, of necessity...
Here are some of the things the newest version of SurfWatch will...
Many opponents of the CDA see nothing wrong with more protection for children on the Internet to avoid obscenity. In fact, America Online and CompuServe already have parental control features to let kids use their services without being exposed to unsuitable material. Similar programs, like SurfWatch, provide filters for the users directly accessing the Internet...
...Duvall is no ordinary pornography collector. His little black book is built into a program called SurfWatch that, instead of connecting to the electronic hot spots, automatically blocks access to them. SurfWatch of Los Altos, California, is one of a growing number of computer programs designed to answer a fundamental concern of parents, educators and even employers: How can porn be prevented from coming into computers? Fearful that Congress will try to stifle cyberspace with overly broad antismut laws, computer hackers and civil libertarians are promoting such desktop remedies as a way to keep censorship where they think it belongs...