- From: Michael Dillon <michael@junction.net>
- Date: Sat, 24 Jun 1995 22:01:13 -0700 (PDT)
- To: Ken Meyering <immedia@netwest.com>
- Cc: Kee Hinckley <nazgul@utopia.com>, Peter Deutsch <peterd@bunyip.com>, Marc Salomon <marc@matahari.ckm.ucsf.edu>, www-talk@www10.w3.org, rating@junction.net, uri@bunyip.com
On Sat, 24 Jun 1995, Ken Meyering wrote: > This way, every domain can have it's own "evaluation" of other domains, and > users. Why limit the distributed "ratings" and evaluation process to > "protecting children from filth"? This is precisely why I am proposing that ratings be served up by a third party, i.e. not the WWW author nor the WWW server operator. Any third party who wishes can set up a ratings server and serve up ratings. In fact, it could be set up in about 30 minutes with a simple PERL script serving up records from a dbm database if it were not for the fact that ratings servers will become the target of crackers, fun-loving college students (the ones who put cars on roofs) and so on. In order to have a workable solution in the real world, the rating needs to be served up in a secure way so that the WWW browser client knows it is a legitimate rating. > Different domains could be subjectively "weighted" by parents. These > "weights" would result in a more balanced "overall recommendation". While I disagree with your simple linear scale, you are right about weightings. The server can't just serve up a yes or no; it must be possible for the parent to configure it to their family. For instance, if a ratings server has a whole bunch of Oklahoma City bombing URL's it may recommend some as suitable for younger children while rating others as more appropriate to older teens such as photos with blood on them, etc. An individual parent needs to have the ability to adjust their client end so that their sensitive teenage daughter who witnessed her father blow his brains out with a gun in the mouth, does not see any bloody pictures. At the same time, other teen-rated URL's talking about government agents planting the explosives might still be allowed for that teen. The ratings system needs to be rich enough to accomodate these kinds of things. Michael Dillon Voice: +1-604-546-8022 Memra Software Inc. Fax: +1-604-542-4130 http://www.memra.com E-mail: michael@memra.com
Received on Sunday, 25 June 1995 01:56:57 UTC