Parental Guidance
Suggested
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
Since the advent of the Web, parents have worried about children
visiting pornographic and violent Web sites. Then filters like
NetNanny came along to block them. Now parents worry about instant
messaging, e-mail, and peer-to-peer file sharing. Whether kids are
looking for trouble or it's looking for them, the latest
parental-control software can help monitor them online.
This year's packages are smarter, stronger, and simpler. While
overblocking can be a problem, developers constantly tune their
lists and filters. And since kids are often more computer-savvy than
parents, developers have hardened security. Yet ease of use is still
a prerequisite; many parents will set up complicated apps wrong or
not at all.
America Online and MSN (not reviewed here) have improved their
filters. AOL uses lists and heuristic technology to block offensive
sites and lets parents set online time limits. MSN 8 lets you
monitor all applications that connect to the Internet and control
IM, e-mail, and file downloads.
There's no substitute for supervision, but the following software
can help protect your children—when you're watching and when you're
not.
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Cybersitter
2002
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July 1, 2003
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Our favorite parental-control package, Cybersitter 2002, covers
sex, drugs, hate, and violence out of the box. Fine-tuning
protection in over 30 categories—from cults to hacking—is simple.
Specifying blocked or allowed sites is straightforward, and unlisted
sites are filtered for content. Unlike its competitors, Cybersitter
offers free list updates. (Click
here to read the full review.)
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CyberPatrol
6.0
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
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CyberPatrol 6 delivers a generous assortment of protection and
easy customization features for both tech-savvy and tech-naive
parents. Context-sensitive menu trees make navigation simple, and
URL and Web page analysis attempts to protect kids from pages not on
the program's block list. With unlimited user profiles, parents can
customize Internet and PC access for all family members. CyberPatrol
was one of the first filters to let users set up daily and weekly
time quotas.
By default, CyberPatrol's filter is set to the most restrictive
configuration, but parents can customize it with a selection of 13
categories from the CyberNot list and add their own URLs and
keywords. Like Cybersitter 2002 with its timed suspend mode,
CyberPatrol switches back to the default user after a set time,
protecting little ones even if you forget.
The program-blocking feature scans your PC and presents a large,
potentially confusing list of applications for you to allow or
block. The list lets you block RegEdit and Msconfig, which kids can
use to hack protection features.
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Cybersitter
2002
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
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Our favorite parental-control package, Cybersitter 2002, covers
sex, drugs, hate, and violence out of the box. Fine-tuning
protection in over 30 categories—from cults to hacking—is simple.
Specifying blocked or allowed sites is straightforward, and unlisted
sites are filtered for content. Unlike its competitors, Cybersitter
offers free list updates.
Running as a system tray icon or in stealth mode, Cybersitter
blocks sites without fanfare; they simply don't appear. (Programs
such as CyberPatrol require a log-on and spawn pop-ups at blocked
sites.) The scheduler makes setting daily and weekly time limits
easy, but you don't get separate user controls: Protection is either
on or off. Parents can keep tabs on kids through daily logs, and
parents with fixed IP addresses on their home systems can download a
free utility from Solid Oak Software to monitor and configure
Cybersitter remotely.
Cybersitter filters POP e-mail and instant messages by blanking
out banned words; for Web-based e-mail it blocks entire messages
with questionable content. The program can also block file sharing,
IM, newsgroups, and FTP access.
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Kidsnet
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
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Rather than blocking only inappropriate Web sites, Kidsnet blocks
all sites except those included within the 125,000 TLDs (top-level
domains) reviewed by the company's staff. Users must log on for Web
access, and then Kidsnet checks each URL visited against an online
database. It blocks sites that are not on the list, but it does not
offer content filtering. This approach keeps kids safe but requires
parents to make many judgment calls as kids try to access unrated
sites.
Blocking level is determined by age, using ratings from the
Internet Content Rating Association, though parents can customize
settings. The database has 21 categories, and control within
categories is granular, so parents can restrict graphic sex but
allow artistic nudity, for example.
At each restricted site, the program explains that access is not
approved and provides a link explaining how parents can manually
override the decision. In our testing at the most restrictive level,
Kids-net successfully blocked e-mail, IM, and newsgroups, as well as
inappropriate sites.
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McAfee Parental Controls
1.0
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
Product: McAfee Parental Controls 1.0
Price: $49.99 direct
Company Info: Network Associates Technology Inc., http://www.mcafee.com/
Editor Rating: 
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McAfee Parental Controls 1.0 (MPC) is easy to set up and
navigate, and it provides powerful protection for online kids. We
like its tracking of visited sites, violations, and trigger
categories or words. MPC is also available as part of McAfee
Internet Security 5.0 ($79.99 direct), which includes antivirus,
firewall, and privacy features.
With McAfee's Instant Updater parents can quickly get the latest
blocked-site lists, then customize both block and allow lists for
words and URLs. For unlisted sites, MPC detects inappropriate
content via a word filter.
The program supports an unlimited number of users and, like
CyberPatrol, can block applications so parents can protect
QuickBooks records, for example. Parents can also specify personal
information, such as phone numbers, that MPC will prevent kids from
sending out.
MPC can filter Web, chat, or newsgroup access. Although it can
filter Web-based e-mail and block inappropriate messages, it
disappointingly doesn't filter POP e-mail, though you can disallow
this type of mail. Newsgroups can be blocked, allowed, or restricted
to a custom list.
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Norton Parental
Control
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
Product: Norton Parental Control
Price: $69.95 direct
Company Info: Symantec Corp., http://www.norton.com/
Editor Rating: 
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Norton Parental Control is a no-frills, list-based filter
available only with Norton Internet Security 2003, a suite that also
includes antispam, antivirus, and firewall software. Without content
filtering, though, parents must to more diligent than with
Cybersitter 2002 or McAfee Parental Controls 1.0.
Parental Control lets parents identify users as child, teenager,
or adult and further customize rules in 31 categories. It supports
Windows XP fast user switching, automatically assigning limited user
accounts the appropriate levels. You can also prevent personal
information, such as credit card numbers, from leaking out via
e-mail, newsgroup postings, or attachments.
The program's URL-based filters block only sites and newsgroups
on Symantec's lists, which are customizable and updated via Norton
Live Update. The Web history log shows user surfing activity, as
well as violations with dates, user names, and links to the sites in
question. Unfortunately, adding inappropriate logged sites to block
lists isn't easy. And unlike Cybersitter and McAfee Parental
Controls, which filter the content of unlisted sites, Norton
Parental Control allows surfing of unlisted but inappropriate
sites.
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PAL Computer Surveillance
System
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
Product: PAL Computer Surveillance System
Price: $29.95 direct
Company Info: PAL Solutions Ltd., http://www.palsol.com/
Editor Rating: 
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PAL Computer Surveillance System is for parents who want to
monitor the apps their kids use, what they write, and where they go
online. Its site blocking is rudimentary, though, banning only the
sites you specify.
As with Cybersitter 2002, you can install PAL in a hidden mode.
It records keystrokes and writes them to a date- and time-stamped
text file. You can view the logs or have them e-mailed to you
regularly or in response to alerts.
In our testing, word and phrase capture were inconsistent. For
example, in Microsoft Outlook, PAL captured text in a choppy,
difficult-to-follow format.
The keystroke recording logs only the local side of e-mail and
instant messaging, but this lets parents discover screen names or
passwords kids enter. PAL doesn't filter e-mail or IM; you either
allow these or shut the clients down.
When kids enter banned URLs, PAL rudely shuts down the browser
with no explanation or warning. PAL can also snap screenshots at
regular intervals ranging from 6 seconds to 30 minutes.
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Kid Defender
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July 1, 2003 By Jay Munro |
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Kid Defender, the first software release from hardware company
Actiontec Electronics (http://www.actiontec.com/), offers parents
something different: live monitoring. Kid Defender lets parents
connect to children's machines and watch their surfing and messaging
as it happens.
In the late beta version we tested, Kid Defender came with four
licenses—for two parents and two children (additional child licenses
are available). The kids' software does the filtering and reporting,
while the parents' component does the remote monitoring. You can set
preferences to block or allow sites, instant messaging, chat, and
file downloads, as well as the music-sharing app Kazaa. You can also
limit IM partners by screen name.
When a child goes online, Kid Defender can alert the parents via
IM. It then logs every URL and chat room the child visits. Both
sides of IM conversations are logged and relayed in real time. If a
session turns ugly, the parent can remotely shut it down.
Kid Defender is a good solution for parents who want to watch
over their child's shoulder but can't always be there in person.
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| Copyright (c) 2003
Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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