The
Web's Red Light District
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
Based on correspondence
from this
piece on kids and the web, the number-one issue that makes parents
reluctant about the web is its red-light district. Well, let me
cut to the chase: K9webprotection
is a free program that solves the problem, and better than any of
the others I've tried.
A household
with computers and kids has no excuse not to download this right
now. In fact, anyone with a computer who has no interest in visiting
you-know-what kind of sites needs this program right now.
It's a free
program and quick download. It does not slow down browsing speed.
It does not muck up the computer's operation. It does not attempt
to sell you anything. It is not an internet service provider. It
is server based, so it doesn't even run on your hard drive.
In its operation,
it is simplicity itself. It blocks what you want to block but let's
through what should be let through. Because people disagree on what
that is, it offers 5 general settings from severe to liberal, based
on web content. (The default is probably too strict; moderate is
plenty.) To administer the program requires a parent-created password.
Unless the kid knows the password, he or she cannot change it or
disable it.
Oh, there is
probably a workaround somehow, like running a Linux live CD as a
separate operating system, but the truth is that nearly all the
problem of objectionable material on the web is not its accessibility
as such but its ease of accessibility. This program addresses
that problem. It permits parents to relax and not worry when their
kids are on the computer.
Nor is it overbearing.
You really don't want a program that doesn't allow liberal navigation
through the main sites a kid is looking at, whether gaming sites,
Wikipedia, or whatever. Something that has a limited white list
of permitted sites will constantly bump up against this. The parent
administrator will grow tired of permissioning one site after another,
and the kid will grow weary of this constant hectoring and coddling,
and try to find a hack.
This is one
of many problems that have doomed solutions in the past, of which
there are hundreds and hundreds available. Some of them use old
code, but they are selling well, and so there is no incentive to
reinvent the software in light of new software trends. Some slow
down the computer, to a crawl. Most cost money. Some well-intended
but technologically naïve consumers (let's call them suckers) have
even shelled out for dial-up ISPs that promise a squeaky clean web
experience.
K9 avoids all
these problems. Its main product a server-based filter is marketed
to a savvy and competitive industry, so it works to stay on top
of the game. Its profits come from these sales. It offers this home-based
solution for free, probably because someone at the company figured
out that parents are also the people making decisions about server-side
solutions at work. When people see how well this works at home,
they will start to make inquiries at the office.
The staff is
aggressive and focused. As an example of how quick they are, I looked
up Mises.org in their site-rating
database. It was listed as arts, entertainment, and politics
not quite right. So I wrote and pointed out that we best
fit into the category of education. Within the hour, I received
a note back that the designation had been change to education
and this was on a Saturday!
One thing:
K9 does not do email. To me, that's fine. Many products in the past
have tried to do too much web, email, external software
and not succeeded. And while it's true that spam floods are torrential
hey, recall how the US Congress made spam illegal?
the programs to deal with it are also better and better. Gmail rarely
lets spam through. Thunderbird has a great filter. Outlook 2003
is outstanding for this purpose. In any case, red-light email is
on the decline.
Even given
all the products available out there, many people still call for
censorship on the web. Let's leave the rights question aside and
address effectiveness. Markets will always and forever outwit government
planners and censors. The only way to deal with objectionable market-based
material is through a market-based solution that is capable of changing
with the times.
That's how
it is that spam solutions, content filtering, and spyware solutions
are getting better all the time. The companies that produce these
live in a competitive environment in which products improve or die.
Meanwhile, nothing has changed in government-style wars for many
decades. Anti-drug enforcement is the same today as it was 40 years
ago. Same with the war on tobacco, liquor, foreign bad guys, and
all the rest. Government knows only how to coerce and bribe, and
when those don't work, it is out of ideas.
Markets, however,
are responsive, compassionate, consumer-informed, and constantly
progressing. If there is a demand for a service and parents certainly
demand a clean surfing environment enterprise is there to serve.
The day the
government bans the red-light district on the web is the day it
will become more ubiquitous and fashionable than ever. So, please
folks, if you fear web content and its corrupting effects on the
young (and you should), don't turn to government. Let markets do
their work.
K9
might not be the final answer. The company might fall behind. Even
next week, something better might come along. But as of this writing,
it appears to be the best out there. As for the demagogues who are
trying to whip up a frenzy against web content, let them take a
few minutes to see what markets can do, if we just give them a chance.
June
12, 2006
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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