UK Internet Filters Block Disney Sites, Internet Safety Tips, and More

In the UK, Internet providers offer site-blocking tools to their subscribers, so they can filter harmful content from the web. While these tools can be helpful to some, there are some rather peculiar blocks which show that they’re far from perfect, to say the least.

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Over the past several years we have regularly written about court-ordered blockades of pirate sites in the UK.

Today, we take a closer look at another type of blocking, the Internet safety filters UK ISPs offer. These filters, which are sometimes enabled by default, help subscribers to block harmful content, especially for their children.

With help from the Open Rights Group’s Blocked initiative, which documents the scope of various ISP filters, we took a look at how these perform.

The first results are as expected. Many porn sites are blocked and so are sites that are clearly oriented at a mature audience. That’s more or less what these filters are meant for, so no issues there.

We also noticed that many proxies and VPNs are not accessible. While this may seem broad, as they’re not offensive, these tools could allow clever sorts to bypass parental controls, so there’s an argument to be made for their inclusion.

Oddly enough, the Tor browser, which can do the same, is freely accessible. But let’s not digress.

What really stood out to us is that some sites which are targeted at kids, or at least useful to them, are blocked too.

One prime example is the official UK Disney website, located at disney.co.uk, which is blocked by BT’s Strict filters. That seems a bit cruel. The same is true for disneymoviesanywhere.com, which is not very useful, but certainly doesn’t seem harmful to us either.

Apparently, BT doesn’t want children to visit these Disney sites.

No Disney

The parental control filters are supposed to make the web a safer place for kids. While this is a laudable aim, the execution is not always perfect. For example, several ISPs including BT, Plusnet and Virgin Media, are blocking the internetsafetyday.org website.

Admittedly, the site is targeted at parents, but since these will often be behind the same filters, they’re missing out on some good tips and tricks on how to educate their children.

No safety

Talking about education. It’s always good when kids start to experiment with coding at a young age. This is also one of the core messages of the non-profit organization Kidsandcode.org.

“Everyone should have the opportunity to learn how to code,” the site reads.

This makes sense, you’d think, but for kids who are trapped behind the BT Strict or BT Light filters, this is not an option.

What can kids do nowadays then? Play a few simple games? Ideally educational games such as the ones playkidsgames.com offers. As you may have guessed by now, that’s not an option either, at least not behind BT’s Strict filter.

Maybe kids should stick to more boring stuff. Perhaps finish that school project on Vikings, that should be doable, right? Well, it is, as long as you don’t look up vikingsword.com, a historical and educational side dedicated to Viking swords.

Both Three and Sky have blocked the site, with Sky explaining that it’s placed in the “Weapons, Violence, Gore and Hate” category.

Ancient weapons

Perhaps we’re too insensitive, but I think that most children can handle grainy drawings of swords. After all, the average cartoon is more violent nowadays.

And yes, it’s true that decades-old Viking swords are weapons, but Three and Sky are not very consistent as the website of today’s largest weapons manufacturer Lockheed Martin appears to pass through all parental filters just fine.

Luckily, the Open Rights Group allows us to check for these odd results, and report sites which are inaccurately blocked. Interested in checking if your favorite website is blocked? You can do so here. Feel free to report any unusual findings in the comments.

Open Rights Group is currently looking for donations and other means of support to keep its Blocked project up and running. More information is available here.

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Grafikkarten: Nvidia beendet sein Geforce Partner Program

Die Kritik aus der Community war wohl zu groß: Nvidia beendet wenige Wochen nach dem Start sein Geforce Partner Program. Das Unternehmen findet, seine Absichten seien falsch verstanden worden. (Nvidia, AMD)

Die Kritik aus der Community war wohl zu groß: Nvidia beendet wenige Wochen nach dem Start sein Geforce Partner Program. Das Unternehmen findet, seine Absichten seien falsch verstanden worden. (Nvidia, AMD)

Grafikkarten: Nvidia beendet sein Geforce Partner Program

Die Kritik aus der Community war wohl zu groß: Nvidia beendet wenige Wochen nach dem Start sein Geforce Partner Program. Das Unternehmen findet, seine Absichten seien falsch verstanden worden. (Nvidia, AMD)

Die Kritik aus der Community war wohl zu groß: Nvidia beendet wenige Wochen nach dem Start sein Geforce Partner Program. Das Unternehmen findet, seine Absichten seien falsch verstanden worden. (Nvidia, AMD)

Elon Musk hung up on NTSB chief during call about Tesla crash probe

The relationship between Tesla and the NTSB has been rather frosty lately.

Enlarge / Telsa CEO Elon Musk speaks onstage at Elon Musk Answers Your Questions! during SXSW at ACL Live on March 11, 2018 in Austin, Texas. (credit: Chris Saucedo/Getty Images for SXSW)

On April 11, Robert Sumwalt, the chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, called Tesla CEO Elon Musk to tell him that the federal agency was taking the unusual step of removing the company from its investigation into a fatal March 2018 Tesla X crash in California.

Now, as Bloomberg reports, Sumwalt says that Musk abruptly ended the call, according to remarks that the safety official gave before the Society of Air Safety Investigators’ Mid-Atlantic Regional Chapter dinner on Thursday.

"Best I remember, he hung up on us," Sumwalt said.

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Mobiles Internet: Bürger geben in Niedersachsen 1.600 Hinweise auf Funklöcher

Die von den Mobilfunkprovidern angegebene Netzabdeckung stimmt offenbar nur zum Teil mit der Realität überein: Das ist ein erstes Ergebnis einer Aktion, bei der Bürger in Niedersachen innerhalb einer Woche rund 1.600 Funklöcher gemeldet haben. (Mobilfu…

Die von den Mobilfunkprovidern angegebene Netzabdeckung stimmt offenbar nur zum Teil mit der Realität überein: Das ist ein erstes Ergebnis einer Aktion, bei der Bürger in Niedersachen innerhalb einer Woche rund 1.600 Funklöcher gemeldet haben. (Mobilfunk, Internet)

Wochenrückblick: Flirten, Gucken, Löschen, Schmelzen, Spuken

Auf Facebook kann man nun Daten löschen sowie Lebensabschnittspartner finden und VR mit Headsets besser unterwegs nutzen. Wir haben uns die Woche auch ausgiebiger mit Meltdown und Spectre befasst. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Photoshop)

Auf Facebook kann man nun Daten löschen sowie Lebensabschnittspartner finden und VR mit Headsets besser unterwegs nutzen. Wir haben uns die Woche auch ausgiebiger mit Meltdown und Spectre befasst. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Photoshop)

GPD starts shipping the Win 2 handheld gaming PC

The GPD Win 2 is handheld computer that looks like a cross between a tiny laptop and a Nintendo DS. It’s a clamshell device that’s a bit larger than a chunky phone, and which features a 6 inch touchscreen display, a QWERTY keyboard and built-in game co…

The GPD Win 2 is handheld computer that looks like a cross between a tiny laptop and a Nintendo DS. It’s a clamshell device that’s a bit larger than a chunky phone, and which features a 6 inch touchscreen display, a QWERTY keyboard and built-in game controller buttons. GPD raised more than $2.7 million for the […]

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NASA makes flying to Mars look easy, but cross your fingers for InSight anyway

Newest spacecraft will burrow into Mars, but it must first get there safely.

Enlarge / NASA Chief Scientist Jim Green discusses NASA's InSight mission during a prelaunch media briefing. (credit: NASA)

Weather permitting, NASA will send its first spacecraft to Mars since 2013 early on Saturday morning. The InSight mission, designed to study the interior of the Red Planet, is the agency's first Martian lander—a stationary vehicle as opposed to a rover—since the Phoenix spacecraft touched down on Mars in 2008.

We kind of take it for granted that everything on a mission like this will work. NASA really makes it look easy—the last eight rovers, landers, and orbiters it has sent to Mars have all pretty much met or exceeded expectations. But the road to Mars is littered with dozens of failures.

In fact, no other country has ever landed anything on the surface of Mars that survived for more than a few seconds. So with the world's mixed record of success, here's a look at a few potential pitfalls that InSight must avoid before it can burrow 5 meters into Mars and study the interior of the planet in-depth for the first time.

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Body-cam giant snaps up its biggest rival to create near-monopoly

Deal worries law prof, who notes dominant firm can have undue influence over policing.

Enlarge / A Los Angeles police officer wears an AXON body camera during the Immigrants Make America Great March to protest actions being taken by the Trump administration on February 18, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. (credit: David McNew/Getty Images)

Axon, the company formerly known as Taser, has acquired its largest rival, VieVu—setting up a near-monopoly in the market for body-worn cameras.

While Axon already has contracts with most large cities in America, VieVu beat out Axon for a number of large contracts, including those for the New York Police Department, the Miami-Dade Police Department, and the Phoenix Police Department, among others.

Last year, Axon got even more aggressive in pursuing its industry dominance by offering any American law enforcement agency free body cameras and a year’s worth of access to the company’s cloud storage service, Evidence.com.

Digital Ally, now one of the company's smaller rivals, did not respond to Ars’ request for comment.

While the prevalence of body-worn cameras is accelerating, they are still far from ubiquitous.

“Only 20 percent [of cops] have a camera,” Rick Smith, the company’s CEO, told Ars in 2017. “Eighty percent are going out with a gun and no camera. We only need 20- to 30-percent conversion to make it profitable,” he added. “We expect 80 percent to become customers.”

The move has some privacy watchers concerned.

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Would you pay for Facebook if it were ad-free?

Facebook has been coming under some pretty heavy scrutiny for its privacy practices. That’s caught the attention of lawmakers in the US and abroad, and it’s led many people to consider joining the #DeleteFacebook movement. While Facebook is trying to w…

Facebook has been coming under some pretty heavy scrutiny for its privacy practices. That’s caught the attention of lawmakers in the US and abroad, and it’s led many people to consider joining the #DeleteFacebook movement. While Facebook is trying to win back users (and avoid hefty fines related to Europe’s new data privacy regulations) by […]

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