Teachers attack NSW DET filter

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A number of NSW teachers and librarians have criticised the Department of Education's (DET) web filtering system, claiming it is too restrictive and has sacrificed educational benefits in the name of child protection.

(School bus image by Kevin Dooley, CC2.0)

"We have such a fixation within the DET on a technological solution for child protection issues most Web 2.0 apps are completely blocked or severely crippled," teacher-librarian and president of the Bangalow-Byron Bay Teachers' Association, Jim Richardson, told ZDNet.com.au recently.

Most Web 2.0 apps are completely blocked or severely crippled

Teacher-librarian Jim Richardson

Richardson, speaking on behalf of several other teachers who did not wish to be identified, said the issue conflicted with the fact that leading educators, both nationally and within DET, had been extolling the learning opportunities of Web 2.0-style applications.

DET's filtering system has two components: a website categorisation engine, SmartFilter, provided by the now McAfee-owned company, Secure Computing; and DET's whitelist approach to filtering.

A whitelist filter blocks any URL that has not been approved, while a blacklist contains a list of URLs that cannot be accessed. In DET's case, if a site has not been categorised and approved by DET's panel of three "educationalist" experts, the site can't be accessed by students.

DET's chief information officer, Stephen Wilson, told ZDNet.com.au that of the 100 million or so websites in the world, the department had categorised about 25 million.

Wilson also disagreed with Richardson's assessment of the impact its filters were having on education. "What we are trying to do is continually improve the experience for kids, so that it is pleasant. That's one of the reasons why we brought filtering in-house last year, which is now done in our datacentre," he said.

A persistent challenge for the state's teachers and those managing the filters, not surprisingly, is the vast range of content available on the web. Wilson said that the 500 most popular sites that were blocked due to being uncategorised are each day submitted to SmartFilter for categorisation and assessment by the panel.

But, he added: "I would expect that most of the hits are within the 25 million that are categorised." He did not have exact numbers on how many URL requests were blocked each day.

Not included on that list of approved sites, however, were free web mail services such as Hotmail, and social networks MySpace and Facebook, which Wilson said DET did not consider to be of educational value.

"We don't think there is a place for that at school. We have our own collaboration systems within the department, and we want our students to use those systems," Wilson said.

The stance on social networking is an interesting contrast to that taken by corporations, such as AMP, which has allowed Facebook to become an integral part of its corporate communications. DET's stance, argued Wilson, was because it had a duty of care to students.

"AMP has a completely different duty of care to its employees than the DET has for underage students. If a child is groomed by a sexual predator or they're subject to bullying, we're accountable for that... If we have systems to prevent that from happening, we are bound to implement them," he said.

More frustrating for teachers, however, according to Richardson, is that many teachers' personal blogs, wikis and content uploaded to YouTube are prevented from being used at school.

Not all bad news
Wilson said that DET does allow "certain collaboration sites" through on exception. "Particularly when they're controlled by a teacher, but as a general rule we don't allow pure social networking on sites that are un-moderated. We don't allow access to YouTube within the environment for this reason," said Wilson.

Personal blogs and wikis look set to remain a sticking point, primarily because DET's filters won't allow sites accessed via a third-party web proxy. "It's our experience that many of the sites that are uncategorised and blocked are proxy anonmyisers and we will not allow anyone to use them within our environment," said Wilson.

Though, the outlook for the ban on YouTube appears a little brighter, with DET aware it does hold some educational value. "We're reviewing access to YouTube right now as a matter of urgency," Wilson said.

What we are trying to do is continually improve the experience for kids, so that it is pleasant.

NSW DET CIO Stephen Wilson

"It's not like we're blind to this. I mean there is so much good information on YouTube. It's just a matter for us to figure a way to only allow the things that teachers have pre-qualified potentially for students to see — then we'd be OK with it. We're working with Google and other companies to find solutions for those issues."

A likely catalyst for further change to the filter is the upcoming deployment of 200,000 netbooks the department is deciding on in the coming weeks, under the Federal Government-funded Digital Education Revolution.

DET already has age-based filtering, permitting senior students to access nudes deemed "art" by the department, while similar sites are blocked for kindergarten students.

"With the learning devices going out, we have a group of people examining the possibility of doing not only age-based but [also] time of day filtering that would change according to the time of day," said Wilson.

That system would mean that the filters were relaxed after say 3:30pm, "so when you take the device home, it has a different profile."

"We want to make it pleasant and we don't want someone surfing the internet and getting a lot of blocks for the wrong reasons. We want them to be blocked for the right reasons," said Wilson.

Talkback

SmartFilter Options

We use the SmartFilter software at our school district.
We have the authorized override function enabled. If a teacher needs to access a blocked site they can get the override password from any librarian. When the override is used an alert email is sent to us so we can track down abuses (by students or staff). Sometimes the teachers aren't very careful using the override and students find out what the password is.
You can also setup different levels of access depending on group membership; teachers vs students. That's done by having Smartfilter integrate with whatever Directory Service is used on your network. So teachers could automatically have access to, let's say, webmail sites while those sites are still blocked for students.
There is lots of valid content that our teachers use from Youtube. That's one of the sites that our teachers perform lots of overrides to access. But unblocking Youtube globally isn't a viable option. It would suck our internet bandwidth dry from students (or staff) using it in a recreational fashion.
Not sure if you've heard of http://www.teachertube.com or not. It's another option.

karl zimmermankarl zimmerman March 5th, 2009
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I'm a Kotara High student. I had some spare time, so I've just been sitting here, reading these comments, and I thought that I may be able to state my opinion here...

A few weeks ago I heard that the worst thing ha happened with this sensorship... it has gone from protecting us from pornography (even though, chances are that they view it with their accounts) to protecting us from flash games to giving us only ABC's immature flash games to play... but I heard that just a few weeks ago, they went to blocking every single executable file except for Microsoft programs (so that removes ACTUAL games, more effective text programs, downloads, Firefox and EVEN adobe flash player updates).

I can't believe that I was excited about getting the laptop next year (2011). I hear my little sister and brother go about, finding the ABC site fun. While we are stuck with flash games like crazi taxi and other pointless crap. I honestly would prefer PS1 games (although, I must admit, some old games are pretty good). The DT could've spent all of that money on learning programs at schools to teach internet safety.

It's like throwing a kid into a box and sealing it up, so that, when they're older, they get taken out and tossed onto the street. The kid's not going to survive. But show him what the treet is like, and he will
1. Be willing to go
and
2. Be able to survive.

Like the anonymous poster above me has stated, a virus would be better that this bullcrap, and if they think that if they do this, we'll all "grow up and be perfect people who won't look at pornography or waste time playing games and will all be just like them", they are very mistaken. People go home and look at porn anyway, you can't help it. They really need to learn computer tech and responsibility, or leave it to people who actually have the tiniest idea about either of them.
And I have some replies to some posts up above:
To Meredith Goon and the anonymous fellow above him: It is very rediculous for primary students to get facebook, as they will never use it. I guess that the DET assumed that the name 'primary' suggested that it is more important than 'high' or 'secondary' schools.

To Henry Zhao: I'm in the same position... people like you don't do anything wrong but you get treated the same as every other retard in high school... the DET aren't very good at being discriminative with blockages, are they? Tafe before Teachers before Primary before High... no sense at all...

To ****ed off: I couldn't agree mre. Who wants to punch the DET retards? Everyone hopefully. I get porn blocking but the way that you can't even research Nazis anymore is just ****
And to anyone who asks this stupid question... "why is your username XD": Because it always has been my username for general programs and games. My gamertag is
XD 116 and my usual username is XD guy... live with it.
I am using my brother's laptop, hoping that our home pc will be fixed soon, so I don't have to live with this **** anymore.

-XD

XDXD March 19th, 2010
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As a NSW student, I am subject to the DET blocking systems. I do propose the following solution to the "problem" that children might notice the internet includes a)opinions and b)interesting things. Personally, I regard it as insulting that I can not differentiate between fact and opinion. Many sites that are not containing any kind of interactive game are blocked under the category of games: such as, for example, www.warseer.com and www.belloflostsouls.net, harmless websites about toy soldiers. If the DET is that afraid that I am going to view toy soldiers, they should get a grip.

However, I know the real reason is that they are afraid of getting sued. They are afraid that some kid will come home one day and say he saw a picture of a toy soldier and read that Osama Bin Laden is rumored to be in some country close to home and the parents will sue the department, for exposing their child to such horrors.

My proposal is this: Simply provide a legal document to every student's parents. The document says, in effect, that the DET are not responsible for anything that goes on while using technology at school. The parents must sign. If they do not wish to do so, then their child goes without technology at school. If the parents are so worried about their child seeing pictures of cars, then they will not sign and their child will be safe.

And as for "protecting" the children, I note that I am not a child anymore. I am a 16 year old teenager. I am legally allowed to reproduce and am close to being able to be married. I can view movies and play video games such as 300 and Fallout 3, inlcuing heavy violence, blood gore and sex, drugs and other, terrible things. But when it comes to the DET protecting me, I am now unable to view a website about Toy Soldiers. Furthermore, how far do you go? It was only pornography in the beggining. You can justify blocking anything.

dantedante May 1st, 2010
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Hi, I'm a Year 11 Student at Cronulla High School, being one who has created several proxy sites and used many evasion techniques to break the DET proxy. I've been successful on many attempts, where I could look anything I desired up. I would be less intent on doing this should you become a little smarter in the implementation of this proxy systrem that you say "protects students".

The DET's blacklist would be much better than their already implemented whitelist. It would be far more efficient, blocking problematic sites, whereby problematic being not perilous to the learning of students, than trying to unblock sites that are deemed acceptable by the DET.

Another problem that I have encountered with the DET's administration of such a proxy system, is the ridiculous grounds on which they base that sites are "unacceptable for student viewing". I was reading a few comments before and one ground was I think "information storage".

I think the DET needs to pull their heads in and actually employ someone who knows what their job entails and actually understands what the students feel like when they are trying to research.

For example it is incredibly annoying when most (being 95% of the internet) internet sites are blocked, or pending categorisation. This circles back to my aforementioned comment about the blacklist/whitelist dispute. Teachers should be monitoring students when they are on the computers and when they encounter a problem such as an inapproprate website, they should report it.

All you are forcing students to do is find new ways to evade your proxy, and that, is far easier than trying to find information through your proxy.

Just my 2-and-a-half cents.

Kurt MKurt M June 11th, 2010
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The truth is that, there is no way of kids not getting around any blocks put in place. So instead, do the signature thing as mentioned above. And anyway, you can search up lots of "inappropriate content" on wikipedia, and they've got no way of blocking that (there'd be riots). If kids can go on facebook at school, then teachers obviously havent got a grip.
And on the note about the school's bandwidth, well, our school's one is already maxing out and has been doing so for months. Filtering's got noting to do with it.

GreenAlmondGreenAlmond June 29th, 2010
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^^Your school has a broadband limit?
Most schools in the NSW region have an unlimited cap...
Anyway, that's not very relevant to this discussion.
What matters is that, most people have pointed this out, the "white list" and "black list" sites are just out of control. Most of the white list sites are only blocked because they could deem as 'distractions' to students doing research. After all, these laptops are primarily used as research tools. If you have a computer at home, why don't you use that?

One of the less discussed things here, however, is the fact that the same sort of restrictions, and the same amount of restrictions, apply outside of school. And this is for 'distraction' sites, like YouTube, Facebook, Myspace, Blogger, you get the picture.
These need to be dumbed down. Yes, keep the pr0n sites blocked. Keep the racist/vulgar/hate/etc. websites blocked. Keep the illegal sites blocked.
But at the end of the day, not many school kids are going to be able to be defiant against the DET, start illegal activities, stalk people, or do unwarranted activities on these laptops outside of their school, on sites like YouTube and Facebook. The DET needs to realize that outside of school, we're using these sites for entertainment, not to harass people, or do illegal things.

Chromium ToxideChromium Toxide July 21st, 2010
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Bandwidth not length

EmuPlainsEmuPlains April 30th, 2012
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the det have no idea on what they are doing. I am a year 10 student and have had the goverment laptops for a year. the first thought my friends and i thought they where cool untill we found that they bean to decide to block everything. And i mean every thing. I do multimedia for one of my electives and i have times when i have to look up the definition of a file type, i spend about 10-15 minuts looking for one definition because 9 out of ten sites are blocked. this is one big time waster as it generally happens to all multimedia thing i need to look up.

tj6795tj6795 February 11th, 2011
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The Laptops handed out by the government were primarily a publicity stunt, secondarily a way to increase popular vote for Kevin Rudd and thirdly something that might actually improve our learning. Though the DET was not sure about my third point.

Y2KY2K August 26th, 2011
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I Think The government should really figure it out that not all students use the internet for porn. I use a site called Quizilla and it wasnt blocked for months, in fact it got blocked in the last week. I've been using this internet site for 6 months now. All it has done is; boost my confidence, help my english and grammer, help me create a better social network and slowly help me achieve a goal I've been thinking about my whole life.
This site isn't bad. It just has people from all over the world, putting up novels they have written, quizzes they made up, poetry, lyrics, polls. Ive learnt alot from this site and now they have ruined my social life. I strive to be an author one day, so i upload stories i have written, and people give me feed back so i know how to improve and what people look for in a novel. Everytime someone gives me a good review, my confidence boosts and i feel as though i can actually do something with my pathetic life.
It isnt fair that they can block something that helps me so much. I dont have much access to the internet other than the school laptop and my ipod touch. Neither are very good for the internet but are all i have.
The government should grow up and realise that not all sites are bad, just becaue they can be used socially.
-A very frustrated teenager just wanting the chance to be all i can be.

Carma13Carma13 March 13th, 2011
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I've just read through all of the above comments, and I can't really agree enough for the majority of them. The ones that generally say, "the DET block is a waste of time".
Thing is, us students have been protesting since 2009. It's 2011 now. They're not going to change.

Fellow students of mine are getting the passwords for Tafe accounts, just for the slightly-more-unrestricted internet access. They are risking suspension (yes, you will get suspended if you are caught using another person's account) just for the internet access. Yes, we ARE that desperate, you stupid DET. There. I said it. STUPID.

Contrary to popular belief, not ALL high school students have the money to spend on PCs for home. This annoying, restricted laptop is the only piece of internet-accessing technology I have. Oh woe is me.

Everything else I want to say has been said already, multiple times. But of course, the DET don't care how inconvenient it is for us; they just want to "continually improve the experience for kids, so that it is pleasant." Get with it, you dinosaurs.

one student among manyone student among many March 27th, 2011
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I am a year 11 student who works hard and does my homework and assignments and I hate the det filtering. I have to use my iPod touch to go on a site like this at home because it's blocked on my stupid laptop. Sure the sites will be unblocked when we finish school, but what's stupid is that there are more sites blocked on the laptops then the school computers! I've had to end up using my mums Tafe password to get on sites such as fanfiction which has improved my spelling and grammar and allowed me to read other people's stories and post my own, but I can't do it at home! I personally think that we deserve more freedom on these laptops especially at home. The thing that makes it worse though is that most of the educational sites we use for our assignments are blocked! We need to learn to be safe and that's not going to happen with all the "dangerous" sites are blocked. What's going to happen when we finish school and all these "dangerous" sites are unblocked? Sorry for ranting but that's just my opinion.

MelWoods1994MelWoods1994 April 25th, 2011
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Be careful as we know who all of you are, and we're watching.

DETNSWDETNSW July 10th, 2011
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You have no concept of just how important it is for students to have open access to a variety of different websites. Students could be learning so much more without the filter you have put in place rather than spending all day every day trying to find a way around the filter. Students should be allowed to have open access to the information that they require. Described in Article 19 of the United Nations Declaration of Universal Human Rights:
“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
It would seem that the filter - or as many are calling it 'consorship' - you have put in place violates the second part of the above declaration. Also, due to your little 'cautionary threat' you would be breaking the law by repromanding or punishing those who have posted on this page. So I suggest that it is YOU who are careful with YOUR words...

AnonymousViperAnonymousViper August 18th, 2011
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omg!! you know who we are!! -gasp- what are you going to do to us?? suspend us for complaining that i cant even play a game that helps me with my honestly shitty arithmetic at home. yeah. all this has been said before but obvioulsly you don't listen. i got one of those "vintage 09" laptops, yeah, thats what they're calling them, vintage. i play this game almost eveyday because it helps me with maths and money skills, this game is called coffee stand. it is on www.coolmath-games.com. i can access this site on the dektop computers at school, so how come with the 'relaation' of the restrictions after school hours can i not play this at home?

freedomfighterfreedomfighter November 25th, 2011
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I'm a year 10 student from Sydney's south west and I have to say, the DET are a bunch of nutless monkeys. Ok, fair enough, porn is bad, and they DEFINITELY have some brains blocking that, (they probably use their own laptops to go on it themselves) but blocking everything? Literally almost everything on my laptop is blocked and I'm sick of it, recently we had to do an assessment for pdhpe and we had to make a space on wikispaces, and guess what? Yep it was blocked. SERIOUSLY, they have no idea how much they are affecting the kids, some of us have really bad internet! (I use to have a problem with mine and it was 3kb/s, it was horrible) With all these blocked sites, especially educational ones or ones that you have to do an assignment on, they are probably costing so many kids around the country their school certificates, and why? Because the DET are stupid **** that have no idea what they're doing..

NaydawgNaydawg July 23rd, 2011
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Education should be about learning about all that is out there, not a select few items that are deemed necessary by a trio of "experts". Restricting certain sites from access by school students does have its merits, but one of the great flaws is that it is in fact encouraging us to move towards proxy usage and hacking software, which in turn, breeds hackers. I am certain that DET does not want vengeful ex-student hackers messing with their servers.

Y2KY2K August 26th, 2011
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This is ridiculous. I am typing this from my own private laptop. I walked past a high school and my laptop picked up their wireless internet. Now anytime I go on the internet (my own wireless) it comes up with the department of education web blocks. I dont know how to get rid of them!

Lee18Lee18 October 28th, 2011
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I believe that DET is out of control, blocking every website that is remotely realted to games or other unwanted content. I am typing this from my 2011 DET notebook after realising that game related wikis have too been blocked. Just today, I found that the "Skyrim Wiki" has been blocked and classified under the category "informational, games". THIS IS OUT OF CONTROL, I FEEL LIKE I AM BEING CONTROLLED BY A TOTALITARIAN GOVERNEMENT THAT OUTLAWS ANYTHING APART FROM WEBSITES THAT MAKE YOUR BRAIN TURN TO A BLOODY PILE OF MULCH INCLUDING FLASH GAMES THAT CAN SUCK MY D!CK FOR ALL I CARE!

sashdog97sashdog97 November 21st, 2011
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in a democratic country this level of censorship is completely insane. As a year 11 student who was part of the first year of this laptop scheme i can see good sides and bad sides to this technology given to us. The problen with this is that the bad things gossly outweigh the good things. The hard drives of these computers are so crammed with sh*t that no one is ever going to use that they take nearly half an hour to boot up. this is nearly an entire period of class jut to get the fu*king thing going then to have every site blocked that we actually need for research. Why in the Gods names do we have the infernal machines. All they o is give you a back ache from sitting in your bag. So mr(s) DET person, why do we have these things that don't run properly cos you loaded a prototype of windows 7 onto a computer that hardly has the CPU for windows XP then load it up with programs that are never going to get used and so make the computer run even slower. To put a chery on top of that delicious looking ice cream, you block another site each week, a site that my HSC could hang in the balance of being blocked or unblocked.
Just grow up, stop being a god damned galapogas tortoise and realise that you're not doing us any favours by blocking all these sites.
I'm actually surprised that i could access this on my DET laptop.
"What we are trying to do is continually improve the experience for kids, so that it is pleasant."
well, you failed, the extent of this communist-esque censorship is just making tudents frustrated. In fact, i know of at least five DET laptops that have been intentionally smashed because their owners got frustratewd to the extent that the only way they could express their anger was to take it out on these rubbish pieces of failed technology. I myself have been very tempted to smash my own laptop on many occasions, tonight being one of them.
thanks for reading my little vent. i'm pretty sure at least two keys now don't work. these laptops are so poorly constructed that the keys and mousepad deteriorate rapidly and are impossible to use two or more weeks after an "upgrade".

freedomfighterfreedomfighter November 25th, 2011
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I am a year 12 student at Keira High School. I agree with everything everyone above as said. If I had a dollar for every time our TEACHERS have asked us to access a website for class or assignments, and then the website has come up as blocked, I would be a millionaire. I thought this country was meant to be a democracy? With freedom of speech and all that... But with the level of censorship that the DET put in place, we might as well be living in North Korea. Yes, I absolutely agree, block porn sites and racist sites. But there are websites that are currently blocked that we NEED for in-class work and assignments. Many students don't have access to the net at home and therefore need the school laptops to do all their homework and assignments. Also, why block sites like Youtube, Fanfiction.net and blogspot.com? Youtube already has a block system in place that prohibits anyone under the age of 18 to view certain videos. Fanfiction.net has been a fantastic source of confidence and feedback for me, as a budding author. The same goes for blogspot.com. I run a blog about Asian popular culture. Through this blog, I have created networks in China, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and Thailand. This has given a great source of knowledge about life in these countries and has introduced tons of new ideas, music, books and friends to me. But, of course, the DET doesn't want us to have new ideas, they just want us to get the ideas that THEY want us to have. I was under the impression that Kim Jong Il was dead, but apparently he's working for the DET.

Sorry for carrying on a bit, but I have very strong opinions and I stand up for what I believe is right.

LeeMinKyuLeeMinKyu January 7th, 2012
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I agree that the NSWDET, is becoming a bit excessive with their blocking of sites. It is especially infuriating when I constantly visit a site, only to visit it again one day and find out it is blocked. For example, when they blocked Fanfiction.net, I asked my technologically gifted friends to find a way around it. They did. And do you know what else, thanks to that freedom, which I only wanted to view Fanfiction.net, I was able to access sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr etc. I wasn't asking for that freedom, but I got it anyway, and that was when I actually started getting distracted.

What the NSWDET fails to realise is; most of us students do use the laptops for entertainment when we're not at school. A lot of students have adapted to the sites which aren't blocked to find this entertainment; and as a result, when they are blocked, we will find a new site to entertain ourselves, or we will find a way around it, using hacking programs or teacher's/TAFE passwords. Once a student has found a way to get around something, they tend to start abusing their power for all that it's worth. If the restrictions weren't so heavy and constricting, students would have their entertainment, and they wouldn't go around looking for ways to break the system.

KallinaMiranKallinaMiran February 4th, 2012
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I don't mind the block, but as long as they block the right things. For example: My Student portal DET Email is blocked! Why? I can't even send or receive emails to do my classwork and homework. They really need to check into this, because it is the main reason why i can't even submit my homework to the teacher on time or do group work with my other peers -_-

fpstudentfpstudent February 24th, 2012
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The 2012 laptops aren't any better.
I was mucking around on wikipedia and pressed "random page"
I ended up on a blocked website (still part of wikipedia.org) and it was categorised in "educational" and nothing else ._____. seriously DET, educational stuff is blocked???

The only thing we can do on these laptops is change the wallpaper.

Chicken PatataChicken Patata March 6th, 2012
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So this morning i was feeling awefully sick, i forgot i had an assignment due today so as the normal person does they email it their their teacher, although I log on click on email BLOCKED FREAKIN SITE! well done NSWDET well done! now i am going to most likely have a lunch detention because of you mindless **** congratufknlations. It just shows how intelligent our government is.

NyanPoopNyanPoop March 7th, 2012
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Well, I have spent over an hour trying to find ways to evade the internet filter on my laptop. I found this article instead and realised that the internet filter wastes my time intstead of maximising it. I think DET should rethink the filter. I went home one day to find that even my DET email was blocked! I think the restrictions are going over the top. Censoring things like blogs and newsgroups/forums just limit our ability to access information and ideas from the rest of the world, as well as forming opinions as we should be doing at this age.


-A Trapped High School Student

izzyizzy March 27th, 2012
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3 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

In terms of capacity, fibre is basically future proof. Never mind 100Mbps or even 1Gbps. Computer scientists have already achieved 100 gi...

3 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

What I like about Mike Quigley is that he is making it happen, despite all the bull**t barriers being put in front of him by Coalition po...

3 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

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Gonna be crowded when TA switches of the inter webby thingy and everyone moves there, just as you suggested though.

5 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

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Oh of course you would would want something in return. hmmm I see, well maybe my best wishes for and your family. btw, Western Union is ...

6 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Well Willunga looks like a nice place to live, close to wine growing areas, a golf club. Houses are probably reasonably priced. Very nice...

6 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

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If I give you money what do I get in return? Do you know how commerce works or are you just a filthy poor that wants my monies for nothin...

6 hours ago by Hubert Cumberdale on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

@joedamato just try varying caps randomly. Maybe they do this http://t.co/1FN5FwYv

NSW outlines datacentre migration plans - Hardware - News - ZDNet Australia http://t.co/OQfUl0D1

MikeSkoey - thanks for your comments. Rather than hang my head in shame, I am proud of my achievements, particularly of being able to ru...

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Chrome overtakes IE: does it matter? http://t.co/e4SILk8a

A ZDNet study showed that British Facebook users are drunk in 76 percent of their photos.

The HDMI cable ripoff and why retail is really dying http://t.co/eFT7zEW7

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In Facebook IPO fiasco the 'smart money' got burnt - ZDNet (blog): TIMEIn Facebook IPO fiasco the 'smart money' ... http://t.co/3iD1g6lG

But will we actually get 100mps Internet speeds often overstated RT@vexnews: NBN users opt for highest speed plan http://t.co/1uTiHXrd

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