answer:“You agree not to willfully post any copyrighted or illegal material to ask-public.” – ask-public Terms and Conditions I post that because, given the potential for abuse of such software, I feel an ethical duty to not answer, and advise others against answering. While this may be asked with honest good intentions, I cannot be sure that others who read this thread are also pure of heart, nor do I want to give tech advice to stalkers, “black hat” hackers, and other ne’er-do-wells. In other words, I do not wish to risk accidentally facilitating the commission of illegal acts. Such software has been abused by others in the past means that even legitimate use of such software may run afoul of certain (vaguely written) privacy laws even if it’s a parent “monitoring” their own child. Call it bad people ruining a good thing, but that’s the way it is. Also, most such software can be circumvented one way or another anyways once it’s presence is noticed, and the “bad sites” filter is technically impossible until we can make an AI that can approach humanity in it’s discretion. Those filters tend to be…. unreliable at best, and are more likely to block legitimate sites than pornographic ones. The best way to keep kids off of those sites is to raise them in a way that makes them not want to go there in the first place. Therefore, even without the legal encumbrances, I question how good many of the commercially available programs are.