Hi Ronni and all others, thanks heaps for feedback here, this should see
me under control. I need to digest all your feedback and will implement
as per this below. 

 

Thanks again particularly Ronni.

 

Regards

 

Peter.

 

 

Kind Regards,

Peter Crisp, 

Project Controls Hub Lead, Perth

Associate, BE Mech

 
*Phone + 61 8 9428 5437
*Mob 0402 001 019
?E-mail pcr...@hatch.com.au



________________________________

From: wamug-ow...@wamug.org.au [mailto:wamug-ow...@wamug.org.au] On
Behalf Of Ronda Brown
Sent: Tuesday, 21 September 2010 11:27 AM
To: WAMUG Mailing List
Subject: Re: Parental Controls

 

 

On 21/09/2010, at 10:07 AM, Crisp, Peter wrote:





All, I bought two Macbooks (the black one previous to the current white
one) running Leopard for my two kids (9 & 7) a little while back. I want
to set them up so they can't wreck the build so I presume I set up an
Admin account for me and a User account for each of them respectively on
the two machines. They are also using the internet for kid's games but I
want to make sure the sites they visit, deliberately or inadvertently,
are suitable for the age. I believe "Parental Control" might give me
sufficient control over this but I am interested if others out there
have experience in this and have any tips from your experiences to date.

 

Are there any good third party programs (Net Nanny, et al) out there?

 

Thanks for any tips.


Regards

 

Peter

 

Hi Peter,

 

Firstly I must emphasise ... Nothing, and I mean nothing beats
supervising your kids while they are using The Net.


Setup each computer with Administrator Account for yourself and setup a
'Managed with Parental Controls' Account for each of your kids.

Parental controls let you manage your kids use of the computer, the
applications on it, and the Internet.

 

The Parental Controls preferences are on five sections, each of which is
labeled by a button at the top of the pane.

System: Determines if the account is managed or if it uses 'Simple
Finder', and lets you choose which applications the account's user can
run.

Simplified Account: Uses 'Simple Finder', this gives a simplified view
of the finder, with limited menu options, for younger users, or for
those who you want to prevent from accessing all the functions of a
normal account. Once you have made this choice, you can still apply the
rest of the Parental Control settings.

Limit Application Access: Whether you check use Simple Finder or not,
you can limit a user's access to applications on the Mac.

Content Controls: Set controls for two types of content, that which is
accessible from Dictionary, and that which users can access
via Safari or other Web browsers.

Dictionary controls: To prevent a user from accessing "inappropriate
content". (This I feel is rather useless, as nothing prevents a kid from
looking up "inappropriate words" in a dictionary book, or searching on
the Web).

Web site restrictions: The Parental Controls preferences offer you
limited restrictions for Web site access. These controls affect any
program that accesses the Web, whether it is Apple's Safari Web browser;
other browsers such as Firefox; or even other applications that can
access the Web, such as RSS readers. You have three options:

1. Allow unrestricted access to websites: This places no controls over
Web access.
2. Try to limit access to adult websites automatically: This uses a
built-in set of filters to attempt to block access to sites with adult
content. When a site is blocked, the Web browser displays a page,
explaining why it was blocked, and offering to add the site to the list
of allowed sites.

3. Allow access to only these websites: If you select this radio button,
you will drastically limit the sites that your children can access. By
default, Apple includes a handful of kid-friendly sites (but I would not
recommend 'YouTube' to be a place to let young children roam unchecked),
but you can add your own as well:

Mail & iChat Controls: All you can do here is limit which correspondents
your user can email or chat with via Apple's Mail and iChat
applications (it does not apply to other software).

Time Limits: you can also set time limits so your user can access the
Mac only for a limited amount of time on weekdays and on weekends. In
addition, you can prevent access between certain times-between bedtime
and morning, for instance-on school nights and on weekends. To access
time limits, click the Time Limits button in the Parental Controls
preference pane.

Logs: When you activate parental controls for a user, no matter what
type of controls you apply, your Mac keeps a log of the Web sites that
user visits. If you have content limitations set, it will also keep a
list of sites that have been blocked. If you have limited your user's
access to applications, it will list applications that the user has
launched, as well as those that have been blocked, and if you've limited
iChat access, it will show all chat attempts made with people not in the
user's whitelist.
You can view these logs to see what your users have been accessing, and
what has been blocked; for instance, this is useful if you want
to know what Web sites they've been trying to visit.

 

All the above information is taken from my purchased copies of "Take
Control of Users & Accounts in Leopard" & "Take Control of Users &
Accounts in Snow Leopard".

 

A Video on Parental Controls can be viewed here:
<http://www.apple.com/findouthow/mac/#parentalcontrols>

There are third-party software solutions as well.
A good site with information about Internet Safety for Children is:
<http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/internetsafetychild.html>

 

<http://www.microsoft.com/protect/parents/childsafety/age.aspx>

<http://www.safekids.com/>



After all the above, I must again mention "Supervision of what your kids
are doing when on the computer is essential"!

 

Cheers,
Ronni

17" MacBook Pro  Intel Core i7

2.66GHz / 4GB / 1067 MHz DDR3 / 500GB Serial ATA Drive @ 7200rpm


OS X 10.6.3 Snow Leopard
Windows 7 Ultimate (under sufferance)

 

 

 

 

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