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Parental Control Software: |
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What Should You Look For In A Parental
Control Software Program? |
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(From www.MonitoringSoftwareReviews.org) |
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Effective
Monitoring
This is the meat and potatoes of any
internet monitoring software. Be careful, because there are
several companies out there that claim their product
monitors things such as IMs and Email, but really all their
program does is record keystrokes.
You need a program that's going to
allow you to see both sides of an IM conversation, sent and
received email, all web pages visited (not just web
addresses typed), AND show you screen shots of any activity
you've labeled as important.
WebWatcher,
for example, has a web-based interface that is both quick
and reliable and can be accessed from any web browser at any
time. To learn more about this
software, read our
review.
Remote
data access / web-based access / Accessibility of
information
This is a
very
close second in our eyes to 'Monitoring effectiveness'.
Here's why:
What use is monitoring software if you
can't get to the data?! Whether you are trying to monitor
your children or your employees, you are going to have to
find a way to view the recorded information, and often
without the person knowing it.
How do you do that if the person is
using the computer exactly when you want to be monitoring
things?
Our advice: go with a program like
WebWatcher
that
offers some kind of web-based access to the recorded
information. With today's encryption it's safe and
convenient. Remote data access--especially via a web
interface is the ONLY way to go as far as we're concerned.
Stealth
For obvious reasons, this is a
critical feature for most people. While people with very
young kids may not need this, if you want to have any hope
of seeing what the person you're monitoring does when (they
think) no one is looking, you need a program that runs
entirely in the background, invisibly.
PC Tattletale, for example, is undetectable in
either the Windows Start Menu, Task Manager or Add/Remove
programs. To learn more about this
program, read our
review.
Key
Logger
This is often a highly
underappreciated and misunderstood feature of good
monitoring software or an add-on hardware device. Good
invisible keystroke loggers do a couple of things, among
which they:
- Record usernames and
passwords--even ones that are "starred out"
(i.e. data shown as ****** on
the screen)
- Capture those things that might
otherwise be missed
- Properly format data into
something readable. The lesser ones offer
no mechanism to clean up the
deletes/backspaces, etc.
- Report what program was
used--and when--to record key strokes.
One other interesting note about
keyloggers is that there are two primary types of keystroke
loggers:
- hardware keyloggers:
physical
plugs that attach (hopefully secretly) to the back
of the computer where the keyboard plugs in.
- software keyloggers:
software applications that install on the monitored
individual's computer.
Hardware Key Loggers
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Pros
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Cons
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- Generally very reliable.
- Most are inexpensive.
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- Extremely limited
functionality.
Most people need more than
to just record keystrokes. We can't stress this
one enough.
- Requires repeated
access to monitored computer.
This is a risky
proposition for most folks.
- Easily detected.
How hard is it to look at
the back of your computer for something unusual
sticking out of the keyboard socket?
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Software Key Loggers
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Pros
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Cons
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- Generally very reliable.
- The best key loggers
also record:
A.
What program was the
individual using?
Put another way: what was
it that triggered the keystroke logging.
B.
Switching between multiple
applications
(or back-and-forth even)
- Data formatting
abilities.
This is NOT a standard
feature but a big "must-have". This makes
viewing the recorded data
far
easier than wrestling with
raw unformatted data alone.
- Usually harder to
detect / easier to conceal.
Unlike hardware key
loggers there's no physical device to easily
spot.
Detection usually requires
specialized software looking for key logging
activity, and even this can be a mixed bag.
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- Nothing is 100% fool-proof.
- Quality makes a big
difference.
Lesser-quality
applications that may be crash-prone may miss
recording the most important things if they
crash. (Translation: be sure to buy good
software.)
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One last note on both hardware and
software keyloggers:
Quite often people interchangably use
the terms "ghost key logger" or "invisible key logger" to
describe these devices / applications.
No matter the name, "ghost",
"invisible", or "stealth", the point is the same: to
silently record key strokes typed on a monitored
individual's computer, thus we tend to omit the "ghost",
"invisible", and "stealth" in describing them. It's easier
just to say, "key logger". :-)
PC Tattletale and
WebWatcher
both offer effective key stroke recorders.
Ability
to block
If you're trying to be completely
invisible and have older kids, blocking is probably unwise
as it draws attention to the fact that something is going on
behind the scenes.
But if you have young kids, you need
something that will clean up the internet--this is the group
where blocking really comes in. Since the Internet changes
so fast, we suggest software that has some kind of
contextual blocker and is more than just a list of 'blocked
sites'.
Net Nanny
allows you to block entire categories of web content such as
newsgroups. By doing so, you can eliminate some of the more
embedded objectionable content that kids often stumble
across. To learn more about this
software,
read our review.
Data
filtering
Most of what is recorded on the
typical computer is mundane. Going through that data ranges
from a tedious job to a downright waste of time to search
through for the important things that you're looking for.
Make sure the software you purchase
has some kind of data filter or "alert" word system that
will do as much of this leg work for you as possible.
WebWatcher, for example, can be used to only capture the
need-to-know items and bring them to your attention.
This can save you a lot of valuable time.
Bear in mind, most of these systems
are going to need to be told what's important for you. (Put
another way: words or content that
may be
important for a Catholic family to be on the lookout for may
be quite different from the words and content that
may be
important for a family of Jewish or Muslim or other faith to
be on the lookout for.)
Screenshots
Most of
the good monitoring applications out there take screenshots.
But few of them let you trigger those screenshots with an
alert word. Left on a timer, screenshots can quickly become
overwhelming.
PC Tattletale will take screenshots every few
seconds (this amount can be changed) then arrange them into
a slideshow when you view them. To learn more
about
PC Tattletale,
read our software review.
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