akmom said:
Histories can be deleted. They can be evaded by using "in private" browsing. And websites can be individually deleted from the history. This is the only way I am able to do any online Christmas shopping for my nosy husband.
I agree with cdax to a certain degree. There are some things I wouldn't want my children browsing, but for the most part, I know that accessing information is inevitable and not necessarily bad. I also think kids, especially teens, need some degree of privacy. My parents respected that (as far as I know) and it never got me into any trouble.
Yeah I know. But #1 he cant remember where he left his second shoe half the time. I would guess if he was responsible for deleting his history every time he surfs at least I should be happy he is responsible about something. If I do check history (which I did last week) I do it when he is actively surfing. With him in the room. And I frequently do the "Pop in" when he is online.
Also we have a never ending dialog about how the internet is not private at all. I really have a problem letting them think it is. Believing the internet is private seems to get a lot of adults in trouble.
A good friend of mine son was into magic. He was very good I might add. Anyway he searched online about how to make flash powder. She had the ATF at her door a couple of days later. They searched the house and his locker at school. This is not a story I read about. Its one I was there for (she was a coworker). She said that he is flagged now. Whatever that means.
I am kinda surprised the IT folks here don't back me up more. I mention its inherit lack of privacy every chance I get. The reason its a hot topic for me is I was fired one time for hacking our company computers. It did not take them long to figure out I was not that smart and they brought me back the same day. But they for sure dug through every single byte on my computer.
Just a couple of weeks ago on that "Dallas Cheerleader" Show they rejected a girl because she had posted derogatory comments about the Cowboys on her FB in HS or college.
For me at least its not about disrespecting their privacy. Its about learning the "rules of the road"
http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/10-reasons-why-nothing-you-do-on-the-internet-will-ever-be-private-again[/url]