• BCsven@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    You can do that with a DNS service that won’t let teens link out to those blacklisted sites, but it only works at home. At a buddy’s house they will have full access. Unless you also install a minder app that forces a private DNS on them always. But then they will just visit a friend who’s parents don’t care ans view on somebody elses systems. It stops accidental viewing.

    • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      You can do that with a DNS service that won’t let teens link out to those blacklisted sites

      that’s what I did when my wife insisted I “filter the kids internet”. I also explained to my tech savvy teenager that he should be careful about not letting his mom know if/when he figures out how to bypass it. Also that I would be interested I seeing his solution, should he do it…

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        I didn’t have strict enforcement with my kids, and some web content (like a streaming service) was only available in another country at that time. One day my 13 yr old daughter is on another countries service, and I’m like how did you access that. She said “oh I just setup a proxy server connection.” Me: huh ok. Friend of mine who had his kids on full internet control is like “OH, shit I better check if my kids can do that.” They will find a way :)