Trusting, but verifying, your teenager’s use of the Internet
Jon Udell (an interesting guy who now works for Microsoft):
Parents nowadays face tough questions about whether to monitor or (try to) control their kids’ use of the Internet, and if so, how. Although my personal opinion is that trying to restrict access is a losing battle, I understand why the idea is appealing. You’d like your kids to have some maturity and some perspective under their belts before encountering some of what the Internet so readily brings to their attention. When my kids were younger, the Internet was younger too. I guess if they were still that young I’d be wishing I could create a sandbox for them, even though I don’t think you can. But they’re teenagers now, and they have their own computers. For two reasons, activating the parental controls on those computers isn’t the strategy I want to pursue.
There are indeed some passive ways to keep an eye on things.
Posted by Jim Zellmer at May 22, 2007 12:27 AM
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