Hi All,

I taught for 4 years at a private school for male youth sex offenders.  
Obviously, having filtering on the internet was crucial.  I used Ipcop with 
squid and dansguardian for a couple years; tricky to get going but it worked 
great.  It was also hard to tweak the settings without good knowledge of the 
command line.  I never got the hang of using Webmin for this purpose.  I later 
discovered Clarkconnect, that also used squid and dansguardian.  This system, 
based on Red hat, had a very user friendly graphic interface with drop down 
menus to tweak settings.  I used the community edition, but there is a pay 
edition available with support.  

I would think a big district like Burlington would want to have content 
filtering in place that had support, unless the administrator is a real pro 
with coding/linux/opensource.  Just a thought. 

>>> Dave Tisdell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 05/22/08 9:10 AM >>>
Hi Aaron,

I know how you feel about the censorship thing but schools are required to 
filter in order to receive certain types of federal funding. The law is called 
"Childrens Internet Protection Act" aka CIPA.
It is because of that that I explored things like DansGuardian and SquidGuard.

Dave

Dave 

David Tisdell. Music Teacher
Browns River Middle School
20 River Road
Jericho, VT 05465
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (e-mail)


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>>> "Aaron S. Hawley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 5/21/2008 4:02 PM >>>
Yeah, Dan's Guardian is pretty good -- for a censorship machine!  I
always feel strange endorsing one.  There's something especially nice
about having the code to these types of systems be free software
rather than proprietary, though.

Concerning Active Directory, I recall that Dan's has NTLM support, or some such.

On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 3:32 PM, Bjorn Behrendt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For content Filtering, firewall, spam, and security in general Take a look
> at http://www.untangle.com/.   We paid for the supported version at proctor
> to get some extra Active Directory integration.   But the OpenSource version
> of Untangle is defiantly worth a look.

> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Dave Tisdell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [email protected] 
> Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2008 8:29:53 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: Re: FOSS and Ubuntu at NPA in Burlington
>
> Hi  Terry,
>
> In most situations, content filtering is a network function (at the
> internet gateway); not a client side function. DansGuardian is
> opensource and does an awesome job. It could be run on the client side
> but would create a lot of unnecessary overhead. The board member needs
> to be educated. It is a nonissue; especially in Burlington. I know
> several of the IT people. They do not do client side filtering.They do
> Internet Gateway filtering. The only schools that might still be doing
> client side filtering are very small and don't have adequate support to
> setup network filtering.
>
> Dave


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