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Comment by ben_w

3 days ago

If sparking such interests is your goal, I'd pick hardware that's ancient and chunky, easy to see what bits it has and pull them out, put new ones in. Nothing newer than 1999.

Such things can't run modern websites either.

this can be done purely with software: a browser with a vpn that cannot be changed without parental consent, which only connects to a network designated for children. The vpn provider could then limit access. High school computer labs already do something similar.

We don't need to compromise here, this already exists and works pretty well.

  • First, no. A lot of things supposedly kid-safe have turned out not to be.

    Also, further up chain, I was replying to:

    > if we're willing to shift these costs and responsibility to ISPs, which could separate the internet into two networks, one for children and the other for the rest of us. This is technically just as feasible, and probably cheaper than requiring every website to process

    What you suggest is not that.

    Also also, what you suggest puts the hard problem (configuring software correctly) in the hands of normal people.

    Software configuration is second nature to us nerds, so it's easy to forget that the average person probably only knows how to install pi-hole and one or two VPNs: https://xkcd.com/2501/

    • > First, no. A lot of things supposedly kid-safe have turned out not to be.

      I'm not making a comment with respect to the actual safety these systems offer, just that alternatives exist, which would not all require modified hardware.

      > what you suggest puts the hard problem (configuring software correctly) in the hands of normal people.

      Pre bundled software, specifically browsers, exist. Colleges use them all the time to prevent cheating, e.g. the Lockdown Browser. Those don't require the student to configure anything, they just download the application and login.