Sebuah pelayanan yang dirintis oleh Morria Nickels di Amerika Serikat untuk melayani kaum subkultur yang tersisihkan dari masyarakat. Pada tahun 2006 telah menunjuk dan mengutus Dave Broos sebagai Regional Director di Indonesia
Parents face unique
challenges in raising tech-competent kids. On one hand, we want to help
them discover the beauties of the web landscapes. But we also want to
protect them from harmful content as they learn the critical skills of
digital self-control.
In our home, our kids (ages 14, 11 and 8) love the web, and can
easily find their way around computers and devices. One even attends
classes online. But as the interests and devices in our home have
multiplied, we have had to rethink how to set web restrictions.
Snakes in the Garden
To understand why restrictions are a priority in the first place, let
me rewind the story of creation all the way back to the beginning of
God’s garden, where Adam was given two purposes: “to work it and keep
it” (Genesis 2:15).
For the garden to flourish, Adam was to labor in the soil (“work it”),
and he was called to protect and guard it (or “keep it”). He would sweat
and dig, discern and defend.
This language of working and keeping, used first of Adam, is later applied in Scripture to God’s priests (see Numbers 18:5–6).
Adam functioned not only as the first husband and father, but also as a
prototype of God’s first priest in God’s first temple (Eden).
Eve didn’t yet exist when God made the prohibition forbidding the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (Genesis 2:16–18).
Although Eve took the first bite of the forbidden fruit and was guilty
in her own right, the first sin was an epic leadership failure by Adam.
He was called to celebrate God’s truth, to obey in faith and to keep the
snakes out. But he let the deceiver in, failed to protect Eve and the
garden from satanic lies, and bears the guilt for their sin.
Parenthood in the Digital Age
The implications of this illustration pertain to moms and dads of young kids, but I feel it especially as a dad.
Adam’s initial calling in Eden shapes my calling as a dad in the
digital age. Satan has been speaking lies since Eden. Even to this day,
through digital communication, the slippery snakes in the world lie to
us in the form of masters of marketing, prophets of materialism and
empires of pornography. These deceivers try to slip into our homes
invisibly through wifi signals.
Apart from the serpent crusher, Jesus Christ, there’s no way for any
father or mother to keep all corrupting influences out of the lives of
our children, and no way to eternally protect our children from the
consequences of alluring lies. The second Adam is our ultimate solution.
But in the calling of the first Adam, I sense my own calling to keep and to protect and to guard the digital space of my home.
Out of this paradigm I want to know what websites and content passes
through the router in our home. I want to address concerns—not by
setting up a “nanny state,” but by training our children to understand
limits (of content and time) as they learn to embrace the preciousness
of Jesus Christ, who is more treasurable than any of the emptiest
digital offerings they will ever see on a screen.
The Circle
So how is this done in the digital age?
For Windows 10 users, I’m told the platform was built with impressive
parental controls, based on their user-centered system. But we are a
Mac family.
For the past six months, my wife and I have been using a device
called Circle, a little white cube (yes, Circle is shaped like a cube)
and it sells in the U.S. for about $99.
It’s not a wifi router, and no wifi data passes through it, so Internet
speeds are not slowed down. The Circle is something of a wireless
sidecar, acting as a barrier to step in and block certain web content
from getting from the wifi router to a specific device in your home.
The industry calls it “ARP spoofing,” an old tool of the hacking trade, now redeemed and made commercially available.
The initial setup was easy:
1. I downloaded and installed the free Circle app onto the master device (for me, my iPhone).
2. I unboxed the Circle device and plugged it into an outlet in the same room as the pre-existing wifi router.
3. I introduced it to the home’s wifi network (wirelessly), and paired it with the iPhone app.
4. From this point, every device that connects to the home wifi was identified and listed in my app automatically.
5. Next, on my iPhone app, I created accounts for each person in the house.
6. Then I assigned each device to one person’s account (individual devices cannot be assigned to multiple accounts).
7. Then I determined settings and limits for each user, a setting
that equally regulates all the computers and devices assigned to that
person.
Circle Settings and Limits
All sorts of controls are possible from the master device to run the
Circle, which governs what web data is allowed in. For each user there
are default filter settings for pre-K, kid, teen, adult and none.
It is easy to manually toggle on/off access to specific platforms,
for example: Amazon, Facebook, FaceTime, HBO, Hulu, Instagram, Meerkat,
Minecraft, Netflix, Periscope, Pinterest, Reddit, Snapchat, Tumblr,
Twitter and YouTube.
And simple to manually toggle on/off access to certain categories,
such as: app store, blogs, business, chat + forum, creative arts,
education, email, family, games, government + politics, health, hobbies,
home + food, issues + lifestyles, music, news, online shopping, photo,
science + technology, search + reference, social media, sorts, travel,
video, VPNs and proxies.
Three helpful privacy toggles (on/off) include: ad blocking, Google safe search and YouTube restricted viewing.
Custom filters allow parents to program custom URLs that can be toggled on/off.
Bedtimes can be set to shut off all wifi service between a sleep time and a wake time.
Time limits can be set for specific sites and categories (for
example, 30 minutes of YouTube per day, per user, across all their
devices).
A feature called “Insights” registers a list of all the URLs browsed,
and time spent online, and a list of all sites that were blocked by the
Circle.
And on the home screen is a giant pause button. At any time, with one
push of the button, all web activity can be stopped in the home or for
one particular user.
Circle Pros/Cons
The Circle pros:
• There’s no loss in wifi signal strength or speed.
• All the features outlined above work impressively well.
• The device simplifies parental web control, eliminating the need for setting internal controls in each wifi device.
• For kids using home wifi, it renders accountability software unnecessary.
• The master app is remote, so I can modify the Circle settings on my iPhone from anywhere in the world.
• The device also works to toggle wifi service to Apple TV or other streaming television devices.
• It is versatile enough to handle a range of ages.
• The default “home” settings are immediately applied to any foreign
device that connects to the home’s wifi, but is not assigned to a
specific user.
• The Circle uses a backup battery so the device cannot simply be unplugged and circumvented by crafty kids.
The Circle cons:
• The Circle app used on the master device is only currently available for Apple products.
• By definition, the Circle blocks data from the web; it cannot regulate native apps or games on a device.
• If your child has a mobile phone, you cannot restrict access to
data from cell towers (something to be remedied in a future
subscription-based service called “Circle Go”).
• It is currently not possible to assign multiple users to one
device. The family computer, say, must be assigned to one user (or to
the “home” settings). However, you can adjust the settings on-the-fly to
accommodate different users.
• All bedtimes and time limits operate on a single setting for seven
days of the week, making changes from weekday limits to weekend limits a
manual task.
• Our first Circle crashed after four months.
Circling Back
When power is lost to the device, my iPhone is alerted with a push
notification: “Your Circle has been unplugged.” But it wasn’t unplugged.
And about three months in to our Circle experience I was alerted: “Your
Circle is offline!” Then an hour later: “Your Circle is back online!”
The next day the same thing happened and the Circle was offline (i.e.,
disabled) for about an hour. Nobody was at home at the time, it was
never unplugged, the blinking light on the back never stopped flashing.
After about three weeks of intermittent offline/back online prompts it
went offline permanently. It would not pair again with my phone. The
device died.
Circle support responded quickly to my email, asking: Did you move
your router? (No.) Is this the same iDevice that was used to manage
Circle before? (Yes.) Have there been any changes to the network set up
or Firewall? (No.)
A replacement was shipped immediately with a postage paid UPS sticker
to return the original. The new one arrived, I set it up, and it’s been
working well for two months.
One Tool to Tend the Garden
Parents who want to develop a tech-friendly, but discerning home, who
want to train their children for the unrestricted web they will someday
face alone, face a difficult task. We need God’s wisdom to use parental
technology to help establish healthy limits in our home without
exasperating our children. We want to be careful not to trample upon the
wonders of all the un-forbidden fruit of the worldwide garden, but we
need to train them to know that there are forbidden places of the web to
avoid. A simple device built on a hacker’s trick will not explain all
this to them, nor will it give them the necessary self-control they will
need later in life.
But in the work of online filtering, Circle 1.0
is a promising move in the right direction to facilitate parental
controls. And yet, for all its promise in helping parents protect the
digital space of our homes, it also reminds us of the fallenness of this
world. While keeping the snakes out may be getting a little easier, our
lines of defense (in this life) will never be automatic.
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