CIPA
CIPA
- Children's Internet Protection Act of 1999
The
Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA)
and the Neighborhood Internet Protection Act (NCIPA) went into effect on April
20, 2001. These new laws place restrictions on the use of funding that is available
through the Library Services and Technology Act, Title III of the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act, and on the Universal Service discount program known as
the E-rate (Public Law 106-554). These restrictions take the form of requirements
for Internet safety policies and technology which blocks or filters certain material
from being accessed through the Internet.
An education today is not complete unless it includes teaching children how to
use computers and search the Internet. But in a busy classroom with several computers,
how can a teacher ensure that students are not wasting time playing games or sending
chat messages when they should be doing research? How can a teacher make sure
that no student views an offensive site, even accidentally?
JNet's advanced
proxy-free, server-based technology gives you full-speed Internet access with
tamper-proof filtered internet access,
updated daily. Our filtered internet
access is flexible: you can choose a separate level of filtering for each
Internet user, and you can filter audio, video, freeware, and shareware without
completely blocking those categories.
And
with our customized service, you can choose exactly what kinds of content
to block for each employee or each computer. Each computer can have a different
access profile, configured by the administrator. For example, one computer might
access only e-mail, one only shopping sites, and a third the entire Internet except
for pornography and game sites.
TheJnet for Business provides T-1,
DSL, and dial-up connections; multiple e-mail and webmail accounts; and web site
and broadcast hosting.
With
JNet, there is no need to compromise either your Jewish
values or your productivity when using the Internet.
For
more information please visit theJNEt.com
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