By region
United States
The Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA) requires that U.S. schools have appropriate measures in place to protect students from obscene or harmful online content in order to be eligible for discounts on internet access or internal connections through the Schools and Libraries Program of the Universal Service Fund, commonly known as the E-Rate program."Children's Internet Protection Act"Other countries
These practices exist in Australia, the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Canada, among others. Such filtering blocks Netflix, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, certain games and more.Types
The FCC and CIPA do not specify how the filtering needs to be done, so most schools are using a combination of DNS, browser and firewall-based filtering.DNS filtering
The DNS filtering happens at the domain resolution layer of the Internet and does not allow the IP address of an obscene or harmful website to be discovered. There are multiple paid products that perform such work, but many schools are leveraging free solutions to filter non-safe sites.Browser filtering
Some browser extensions allow parental controls to be enabled to restrict non-desirable website categories. For CIPA, those categories include any website with adult-only content.Firewall-based filtering
Firewall-based filtering can be done at the IP layer or using Web proxies to intercept and filter HTTP and HTTPS requests to websites that are not kid-safe. This type of solution is difficult to implement as much of the web is moving to HTTPS, so it does not have a high efficiency.SafeSearch filtering
Google SafeSearch helps filter out explicit adult material from Google Search results and can be enabled by default in schools.Bypassing
Such acts don't come without rebellion. There are also ways to bypass web filtering at schools which puts students back in control of the web. VPNs and hotspots are the most scientifically proven popular options used by students to get around filtering at school in order to regain access to blocked sites. VPNs hide the IP address location from filtering while hotspots are WiFi used on phones.See also
*References
{{reflist, 33em Internet safety Child safety Cyberbullying Internet censorship in the United States Internet censorship Educational technology