This is an interview from when Richard Maring was interviewed regarding how Americans view the online porn problem. Check it out!
This is an interview from when Richard Maring was interviewed regarding how Americans view the online porn problem. Check it out!
Categories: Media Apperance
Tagged: Addiction, Article, Family, Internet Pornography, Internet Protection, Internet Safety, Love, Marriage, media, News, Pornography, SeeNoEvil
It is hard to describe how amazing the features of SeeNoEvil are in words so I decided to post these videos. Check them out!
Safe Web Browsing
Monitoring and Reporting
Program Controls
Time Limits
Categories: Children · Cyber Bully · Family · Internet Safety · Porn · Pornography · Pornography Addiction · SeeNoEvil · Social Networking · Technology · Teens · Women
Tagged: Addiction, Children, Christianity, Cyberbulling, Family, Filters, Internet, Internet Pornography, Internet Protection, Internet Safety, Kids, Love, Marriage, Men, Online Safety, Parental Controls, Pornography, Pornography Addiction, Predator, Protection, Relationships, SeeNoEvil, Sex, Social Networking, Technology, Teen, Teens, Temptation
Heath Evans, fullback number 44 for the New Orleans Saints endorses Tribinium Corporation’s SeeNoEvil software. Check it out!
Categories: Children · Cyber Bully · Family · Internet Safety · Porn · Pornography · Pornography Addiction · SeeNoEvil · Technology
Tagged: Addiction, Family, Filters, Football, Heath Evans, Heath Evans Foundation, Hope, Internet, Internet Protection, Internet Safety, Kids, Love, Marriage, New Orleans Saints, New Technology, Parents, Predator, Protection, SeeNoEvl, Stop Pornography, Temptation, Tribinium Corporation
Categories: News · Social Networking · Teens
Tagged: Internet Protection, Internet Safety, MySpace, Parental Controsl, Predator, Sex, Teen, Teens
Wow. Justin’s story is one that will make you angry with tears.
Please visit Oprah’s website to see how this young boy was lured into being a porn star though his web came.
Another reason why SeeNoEvil gives parents, the parental controls, to monitor what their children are doing online,
Categories: Internet Safety · News · Teens
Tagged: Family, Internet Protection, Justin, New York Times, Oprah, Oprah Winfrey, Parental Controls, Pornography, SeeNoEvil, Technology, Web Came
Rochester Institute of Technology just released these statistics in a study completed in June of 2008:
-90 percent of parents surveyed indicated that there is an adult present to supervise home computer activities of their children.
-However, only 34 percent of 7-9th graders reported using the Internet with supervision.
-42 percent of 7-9th graders reported using the Internet to talk to a stranger at least once within the last year.
-While 15 percent said they were embarrassed by someone on the Internet and 13 percent said they were threatened by someone on the Internet.
SeeNoEvil software allows you peace of mind that your child will not become an Internet statistics.
We at SeeNoEvil are proud to say SeeNoEvil works because you can easily decide what sites, even what images are acceptable to you and your child, SeeNoEvil allows you to control what content is viewed online by your family.
Categories: Family · Teens
Tagged: Cyberbulling, Family, Internet Protection, Pornography, Rochester Institure, SeeNoEvil, Statistics, Teen, Teens, Tweens
Categories: Family · News · Teens
Tagged: Family, Internet Pornography, Internet Protection, Parental Controls, Pornography, Teen
Click here to read the story in full.
SeeNoEvil is driven with sad stories like these, to continue to help families to protect their children online.
Categories: News · Social Networking · Teens
Tagged: Family, Internet Protection, MySpace, SeeNoEvil, Sex Abuse, Teen
Internet Protection – How Filters Fail to Protect Children Online
Access to pornography, violence, and strangers online is a lot easier than you may think. Internet protection is a must for parents looking to safeguard their family from the dangers on the web. However, filters simply are not accurate or nearly enough. In fact, parents have more to worry about than if their child were to come across a pornography website. Social networking sites, video sites, and gaming sites, are a major concern to parents looking to protect their child online. The very nature of these sites (large, anonymous, and accessible) makes it hard for the site administrators to remove adult rated materials or ensure an adult age of the audience.
The Problem…Social Networking, Pop Ups, and Banner Ads
Some websites, including popular social networking websites, attempt to keep children from viewing adult content material by asking for the user’s age before admitting entrance, however, this can be easily bypassed by a child. If a child does post a profile on a popular social networking site, he or she could be giving out his name, address, phone number, e-mail, hobbies, schools, etc. Your child may think it is not acceptable to hand out this information to a stranger, however, if a child predator gains your child’s confidence; your child might not view him as a stranger. Also, many popular social networking sties host third party applications which display inappropriate images and give out your child’s personal information.
Pop-Up and banner ads are out there waiting for your children. You may visit a site where you feel you spend more time dodging pop-ups rather than viewing the actual site. Gaming and video sites are often times some of the worst sites when it comes to pop ups. Some of these ads will even download spyware or viruses onto your computer. Many of these pop-ups are sexually explicit. Banner ads can be just as bad. Many online networking sites use ads for online dating services. The ads produced for these are often soft-core pornography. The ads are embedded onto the page, so it is impossible to remove them.
The Problem…Filters Don’t Block Porn
Filters work by blocking access to known pornography websites. Pornographers learned this right away and quickly came up with a solution. When a pornographer develops a website, he or she buys more than one URL name for the material. After learning that a URL has been blocked by a filter, a pornographer simply redirects the material to a new URL address that a filter is unaware of. Simply put, filters cannot keep up and search engines can display pornography with a touch of the mouse. Pornographic websites also capitalize on the search engines use of keywords to sort websites. Often pornographers will use names of popular toys and TV shows in their keywords, boosting their ranking in searches for these items. What comes up in the search might sound completely harmless, but could lead to your child accessing pornography.
The Solution
Keep your computer in a room that everyone in the family uses. Enable parental controls that allow you to monitor what your child is doing online and who they are communicating with. Set time limits as to ensure that your child is not online late at night or in the early hours in the morning. Also, research and invest in software that allows you to block access to specific websites. There is even software available that blocks up pops and banner ads – this is a necessity.
Take the time to protect your children online. You will never regret it.
*Looks like SeeNoEvil just might be the solution – offering parental controls, the ability to block banner and pop-ups, and monitor social networking sites.*
Categories: Family · Pornography
Tagged: Family, Filters, Internet Protection, Parental Controls, Pornography, SeeNoEvil