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Paul Sutton wrote: > > I found instructions but they looked kind of complex, if we expect end > users to do this, they won't, if we install ubuntu on a family pc it > would help to have some sort of content filtering. Blacking listing will always be incomplete, and content filtering is too error prone, it will block good stuff you may want your children to see, and not block bad stuff you might prefer to restrict. Whitelisting is probably the right approach for small children, although not foolproof as content on sites can change, and you might trust a third party to whitelist whose judgement you later disagree with. I think logging is probably the right approach for bigger kids, if you can't supervise them. Of course one has to read the logs to make it a credible deterrent. Best whitelisting add-on for a family desktop is probably Glubble, which comes with a load of prepared whitelists, and allows children to request access to other sites not already covered. I don't think it is free software, and it combined a Firefox extension with an online service, so even if it were there would be non-free data and possibly services. Not sure if I'll restrict Isaac's web surfing habits, but if I did Glubble would be what I would compare things to. Simon -- The Mailing List for the Devon & Cornwall LUG http://mailman.dclug.org.uk/listinfo/list FAQ: http://www.dcglug.org.uk/linux_adm/list-faq.html