I have attempted to make my "Kids Page" as safe a place for children as possible:
There is a concern shared by many parents that their children may be exposed to undesirable material if they are given access to the Internet. You may be one of those parents. If so, the following links may provide you with more information on the topic and, perhaps, show you how to make the Internet a safer place for your children.
PEDINFO Parental Control of Internet Access
http://www.lhl.uab.edu/pedinfo/Control.html
The University of Oklahoma Department of Public Safety
Notes, Advice and Warnings for Kids
http://www.uoknor.edu/oupd/kidsafe/warn_kid.htm
Before settling on any one site blocking product, you might want to check out the criteria the producers of it use for blocking sites. If their criteria is too strict or not the same as yours, you could find that your child may be unable to access sites which you think are perfectly all right. In fact, you might find that, after creating a page just for your child, your child can't access the site you created for him or her as your entire ISP's domain has been blocked.
http://www.neosoft.com/parental-control/
http://www.cyberpatrol.com/ -- NOTE: Cyber Patrol has, in the past, been filtering out sites on the grounds of their religious leanings in the mistaken belief that Paganism and Wicca are cults. To their credit, they have reversed that policy after being informed of their error in a flood of protests. For more on this, see: The Witches' Voice report on Cyber Patrol.
http://www.solidoak.com/cysitter.htm -- NOTE: Solid Oak has been accused of not only filtering out indecent material but also entire sites that are guilty only of being critical of Solid Oak. See the "Auschwitz Alphabet Mirror" site for more on this. They also filter out entire domains if there are any sites they don't like in that domain. If you are a parent with a page for your child on geocities.com then don't get CYBERsitter. Your child won't be able to view the page you created for him or her. They may filter out what you would find objectionable but they also will filter out a lot of stuff you might want your child to have access to. Since the parent can't determine exactly what is in their database of filtered sites and can't selectively enable or disable them, I can't personally recommend CYBERsitter.
The Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance have a report on their web site titled "How we were banned in Boston" which describes how this organisation has been blocked by both Cyber Patrol and CYBERsitter. Parents may wish to look elsewhere for software that gives them more control over the blocking, lets them override the software on a case-by-case basis, and has a blocking database that can be examined and/or edited by the parents if they wish to do so rather than have them bow to the arbitrary decisions of a committee the parents don't even know.
From CBC's Market Place come these warnings:
Webmaster: Norman De Forest, <af380@chebucto.ns.ca>