The internet is a evolving community, home to everything from exciting new recipes to hilarious videos to books that are no longer in print. In recent years, as the Web 2.0 revolution shifted the focus of the content online from companies to individual users, the amount and variety of data and entertainment available has exploded. Unfortunately, while the nature of the internet permits the mass propagation of just about anything, it also means that a significant percentage of what’s available might not be appropriate for children (or in some cases, anyone at all). Protecting kids from the hazards of dangerous and inappropriate material online has been a tremendous challenge for parents and educators since the internet became a part of daily life for the majority of Americans. Some may feel in their frustration that the easiest solution is to simply keep children off the internet entirely, but research has shown that keeping kids offline can delay their development in the information age. The internet is a priceless resource for the near instant transfer of information, and being able to navigate it effectively is an indispensable skill in the modern world. Students can benefit greatly from the educational material online as well, so it’s understood that some sort of compromise must be made to allow children some access to the internet. Web filters are the most common programs that parents and schools employ to try to allow children online without giving them access to everything on the web. The balance that any web filter must strike between permitting some but not all content in is a complicated one, and some services are criticized for either blocking legitimate content or allowing objectionable content through. Some even suffer from both problems simultaneously. Even worse, a percentage of filters can easily be subverted by troublesome teens with little to no technical skill. Google, being the most popular search engine on the planet, is stop #1 for many web users and especially most younger ones. There’s plenty of safe content out there for children to access, and Google has always offered its own filter for search results, which has been very successful. Unfortunately these settings could easily be changed by any user, including the ones who shouldn’t not be getting unfiltered results in the first place. Now, Google has launched an improvement that permits a user to lock the SafeSearch option with a password to stop children from changing the settings. The results generated by Google’s search engine while these SafeSearch settings are in place will also be visibly different from the normal search results, with a large image of colored balls in the upper right corner letting parents and teachers know even from across the room that the filter is still working. There’s more than one way to keep kids safe online, and the best option is to combine several layers of protection. Google’s new SafeSearch is a valuable tool to help keep objectionable material away from minors, but it’s no substitute for active involvement with children while they are using the internet and talking with them about the dangers that lie in the unsavory parts of the web.
This author is a Technician at Geek Choice. At Geek Choice we solve computer problems such as: Slow computer, Virus Removal, Spyware Removal, Computer startup issues, and much more.