Article #1
Wolinsky, A. (2001). FilterGate or knowing what we're
walling in or walling out. MultiMedia Schools, 8(3), 22-27. Retrieved
from
https://ezproxy.hacc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/229736251?accountid=11302
Art Wolinsky speaks about how his web site was wrongly
blocked. He created a website and it was being blocked. during his
investigation he talked about the different types of filtering; URL and IP
address filtering. Each type of filtering can be "tricked". Round robin DNS makes it impossible to block
individual sites. IP address filtering
blocks the IP address and any site that is assigned to that address. He found out that his web site was located on
a server that hosted a bunch of porn sites and because the IP address blocked
the server, his web site was being blocked also even though it was not a porn
site. He spoke with several employees at
the company and after talking with a law firm and enough political muscle, the
company said they would work on upgrading their software to help fix this
issue.
Article #2
Swanson, S. (2001). Beware: Employee monitoring is on the
rise. InformationWeek, (851), 57-58. Retrieved from
https://ezproxy.hacc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/229097321?accountid=11302
Sandra Swanson talks about how internet monitoring in
companies have increased from 62.8% from 54.1% in the last year. She talks about a company that didn't use
internet monitoring until an employee printed out some pages from a porn site
and forgot to get it at the printer. She
also talks about how the law towards internet and email monitoring is more
friendly to the employer. This is due to
the companies feeling justified to know how much time employees spend on
surfing the web. The article talks about the different kinds of software that
can monitor and filter inappropriate content and files. Lastly, It talks about the next step in
filtering will be IM and how difficult it might be to try and filter content
through IM.
I choose these two articles because they were closely linked
to what I am researching about with internet censorship. They both talk about how internet filtering
works and how it effects people that access the internet. Art Wolisnsky talks about the down side to
internet filtering and how the current technology still has holes and can block
sites even though they are not considered unlawful. Sandra Swanson talks about how a company
that didn't have internet filtering got in trouble due to an employee not
getting inappropriate documents at the printer.
After doing more research, I feel I have learned more about
how internet censorship works. These
articles have helped me to understand just how much politics and the law help
to define what is filtered and what isn't.
Also have learned that the technology is far from where it should be to accurately
filter appropriate content. This has
raised even more questions to what the different filtering companies are doing
to help increase the accuracy of web and email filtering. I hope to next learn more about the companies
that do the filtering and how they decide on what should and shouldn't be
filtered.
How did you get interested in this topic?
ReplyDeleteSo, both of these articles date back twelve years, which is outdated especially in the computer networking world. Does this mean you couldn't find more current sources? I imagine what sites get blocked, the laws surrounding the issue, and the available software available have changed dramatically in 12 years. As you continue to research, look for sources that are current (within the past three years).
ReplyDeleteYou've identified a a good next step for your research (what criteria companies use for filtering). Do you think these criteria will vary by industry or company to company?