There…I’ve said it. I’m filled with self-loathing for saying it, but Bing’s new approach (and the speed with which they rolled it out) is a model for easy avenues to block objectionable content.
How many schools/libraries block the entire images.google.com domain because their content filtering isn’t sophisticated enough to keep kids from seeing thumbnails they really shouldn’t see? Bing, on the other hand, now makes it a no-brainer to keep this content out of their search engine, regardless of the security settings.
As pointed out on CNet and the Bing Blog, irst, potentially explicit images and video content will now be coming from a separate single domain, explicit.bing.net. This is invisible to the end customer.
Don’t get me wrong: I’m not going to be blocking Google and making my users (or my kids) use Bing anytime soon. I’m a big ol’ Google fan and I think it’s an important tool to teach kids to use responsibly and well. We’re inches from rolling out Google Apps for Education in our district, so the GOOG isn’t going anywhere.
However, this utterly straight-forward approach to making Bing kid/teacher/parent/school/library-friendly is a welcome bit of no-nonsense, fix-the-customer’s-problems goodness from a company not that well-known for fixing customer problems in a timely manner.
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Sunday, June 14, 2009
Google could take a lesson from Bing on porn
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