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Old 31st March 2008, 02:31 AM
daffodil's Avatar
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Default How to Po*n - proof your kid's PC?

Hi friends,

Just came acroos this useful & informative article while browsing.. hence thought of sharing with all.




Your kid loves PC. And you, though would love him to be a tech wizard also get jittery when he spends long hours in front of the screen. The stories of paedophiles lurking the Internet, kids going to Po*n sites and chatting with strangers give you nightmares. Cheer up, you are not the only one.

Just like PCs have become an integral part of lives for most kids. The fear of them falling prey to wrong information or company too haunts most parents. The social networking sites have only added to their worry.

Most of these parents often wonder: how to regulate their kids’ Web surfing, the time they spend on the PC, who they talk too online and what they look for on the Net. For all those worried parents out there, Fropki.com presents some ideas to keep tabs on your kid’s computer activity.

There are several tools available which will help you do the above. However, which one of those is for you depend upon the operating system you have installed on your PC. Here those who have upgraded to Windows Vista are a bit lucky, as the operating system comes with a set of Parental Controls feature. These can be accessed by opening the Control Panel and clicking User Account and Family Safety, and then clicking Parental Controls.

You can use Vista's Parental Controls to set up a separate user account for each of your children. Remember that you have to set yourself as the administrator to do this. You define the administrator account when you first install Vista. After that you can add additional accounts that can then be controlled by the administrator. You can password-protect the administrator account so that your kids cannot gain control of it and change their access settings.

With Vista's parental controls, you can impose limits on all sorts of activities, including the hours they can log in and use the computer, whether they have access to the Internet, which sites they can and cannot visit, and which programmes they can and cannot use. You can even get an activity report that details exactly what your children have done while on the computer.

Vista's Parental Controls also allow you to block games by rating, content, or name. Once you activate parental controls, you can determine whether a specific user account can play games at all.

If you're using Windows XP or an earlier version of Windows, you can use the parental monitoring programmes available on the Internet. Cyber Patrol (CyberPatrol Internet Security Software - Protecting an Online Generation) and Safe Eyes (Parental Controls: Safe Eyes Software at InternetSafety.com) have both been ranked high by independent testers.

These tools provide many of the features found in Vista's parental controls and add a few additional benefits, such as the ability to text message, e-mail, or even phone you at work if kids attempt to break the rules. The downside is that these applications focus on Internet activity alone.


Another option is to use a hardware-based solution that turns off the monitor when children have used all of their allotted time on the computer.

PC Moderator (PC Moderator - Parental Control Device) does just that, but it's a solution that currently only works with monitors that use the standard VGA port. If you're using an LCD with the DV-I port, pass this one by.


There are also several software packages available that help parents keep a tab on their kid's PC activity. Software package such as Spectorsoft's Spector Pro (Computer and Internet Monitoring Software) do not actually block programmes from being run. Rather, they will report to you all the activity that occurred on a particular computer. The software provides complete details of the computer usage. There is also a warning system where you can be alerted based on a series of keywords.

There are also several Keyloggers which can be used as powerful surveillance tools. These keylogger software take total control over the entire computer activity. Most of these work in a stealth mode, completely undetectable in Windows Task Manager with no visual proof.

They log any computer activity, Internet usage, keystrokes, passwords, incoming or outgoing e-mails, shows applications which were launched, record desktop activity and send logs via e-mail. Some of the popular keyloggers are Key Spy Pro, Elite Keylogger and Supreme Spy.

An alternative for users of other versions of Windows is PC Lock Up (PC Lock Up Professional. Computer Lock Up, Parental Control, Myopia Control and Access Control Software to Lockup Windows 2K, XP and Vista!). With PC Lock Up, you can determine which times of day or days of the week that a PC can be used.

The programme can also remind your child to take vision breaks - not staring at the computer for too long - and voice alerts will warn your kids of upcoming lockups.

There are also several freeware like PC Watch, which supports Win 98, 2000, NT and XP.


__________________
"You cannot discover new oceans unless you have the courage to lose sight of the shore."

Cheers,
Daffodil
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