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Why I Blocked Tumblr On My Home Network

February 5, 2013 By Jeff Turner 24 Comments

This past weekend I blocked access to Tumblr.com from my home wireless network.

Tumblr PornI’ve been blocking porn sites using OpenDNS for a long time. But Tumblr.com doesn’t fall into the category of porn site in the OpenDNS directory. It falls into the social media category. However, make no mistake, there is a large part of the Tumblr network this is dedicated to porn. Porn is actually part of Tumblr’s meteoric rise, and it’s easy to access.  Just do a simple search on Google for Tumblr and porn and you can see for yourself. Or go to Tumblr and search under the tag #erotic. Be warned, it’s not safe for work.

Tumblr is aware of their porn issues. In fact, Tumblr is doing everything it can to NOT get labeled a porn app in the iTunes store. And I believe Tumblr’s actions are a symptom of why Internet safety lessons are being urged for 5-year-olds.  “[pq align=right]We are facing an e-safety time bomb[/pq],” Claire Lilley, of the NSPCC, said. “Young people tell us they are experiencing all sorts of new forms of abuse on scale never before seen.”

And while I have hosted JustDugUp.com on Tumblr since the first days of Tumblr’s launch, I have blocked access to it from within my house. It’s unfortunate. Tumblr has a lot of very redeeming qualities. And I have good friends who use Tumblr wisely for business.

Tumblr Should Be Doing More To Limit Porn Access To Children

As a popular social sharing site for teens and tweens, Tumblr should be doing more to provide parents with the tools and information they require to limit access to areas of their site that are overrun by porn, and limit the possibility of exposure to those seeking to prey on children. Or provide a way for sites like OpenDNS to help parents by selectively limiting access.

Why, besides the obvious? Here’s a staggering number, of the 3765 calls about internet abuse that came into the ChildLine last year, 250 involved children being groomed for sex. This was in the United Kingdom. I can only imagine what the numbers would be in the United States, with five times the population.

So, until Tumblr takes actions to limit access to porn by children, it will be blocked on my home network.

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Filed Under: Commentary, Featured Tagged With: child safety, porn, tumblr

Comments

  1. Ken says

    February 5, 2013 at 11:38 am

    What a damn shame. And I had no idea. I don’t use Tumblr as well as some other people. I use it for the occasional rant or stream of consciousness rambling and I’ve bounced around their categories but never stumbled or, should I say, tumbled onto the porn part of the site.

    It seems no place is safe. Facebook is full of political rantings. Twitter is full of people spewing links to their affiliate or eCommerce sites and also has its share of porn. I guess LinkedIn is OK, for the time being. Google+ seems to be OK but, heck, if Tumblr is a mecca for porn, my guess is Google+ has a ton of it.

    I guess that’s the price you pay for an open internet.

    Any thoughts on the gratuitous violence and sex (soft core porn) in video games, the movies and on TV? Can we put our children in a bubble until their old enough?

    Reply
  2. Ken says

    February 5, 2013 at 11:40 am

    Oops. Sorry for the spelling error at the end “their” should be “they’re”.

    Reply
  3. Loren Nason says

    February 5, 2013 at 7:04 pm

    So what can Tumblr do limit access to areas that have porn?

    While I completely agree with what you are saying, there will never be a way for porn to be found on the interwebs w/o age verification.

    Want to be really scarred and scared from what is out there … signup for a proxied and VPN’d newsgroups account. The darkest and seediest underbelly of the net doesn’t use any of these new fangled websites (that much)

    What can we do?
    Teach our kids like our parents did about the bad areas of town.
    not to give out your phone number to strangers (don’t give out real info on the net)
    don’t answer the door if you are home alone (don’t accept anonymous chat requests)
    don’t feed the trolls (ignore the people that talk shit) = sticks and stones will never hurt me

    but still it’s scary … my 9 almost 10yr old is a youtube junkie (watches videos of Bionicles “legos” and minecraft)
    I check his history all the time
    both boys use Open dns and I block lots of stuff

    If my parents knew only some of the stuff I found on the internet BBS’s in the late 80’s early 90’s they would have had heart attacks

    What to do?
    open dialog
    teach them right
    pray that they listen
    monitor, monitor, monitor

    Reply
    • Ken says

      February 6, 2013 at 4:57 am

      Amen, Brother Loren. Preach it!

      Reply
    • Jeff Turner says

      February 6, 2013 at 8:08 am

      Loren, first, you nail it. Open dialog, teach them right, pray they listen, and monitor. One of the ways I monitor is to cut off the stuff that’s possible to cut off. Vine is also cut off right now.

      As for what can Tumblr do? Well, they can institute a community monitor system that flags accounts as porn, then move those accounts to a subdomain that would allow selective blocking. Technically it’s possible. They could create those same flags and require special login with a credit card that would insure, for the most part, that someone over 18 had approved going to the accounts. Or… they could just ban porn. And I don’t mean ban nudity when I say that. I don’t have an issue with nudity.

      Reply
      • David says

        January 1, 2016 at 9:38 pm

        I have tried to block tumblr, the entire site, but it keeps showing up. I have been using Open DNS. I can’t understand what the problem is. Why won’t it get blocked?

        Reply
        • Jeff Turner says

          August 29, 2016 at 5:07 pm

          David, I’ve since installed Disney Circle to manage the network. Have you tried speaking with OpenDNS support?

          Reply
        • Joe says

          January 18, 2017 at 11:05 pm

          OpenDNS usually says that it will take 3 minutes for a domain to be blocked after you enter it in the blocked list. However, my experience is that while some domains get blocked in just 3 minutes, others have taken a whole day. A bit frustrating, but so far I haven’t run into a domain that won’t be blocked within 24 hrs of entering it in the blocked list.

          Another thing to check is whether the problem is on just one or all computers on your network. If only one then its DNS settings may be set to something other than automatic, and other than the OpenDNS settings.

          Reply
  4. Jennifer Kjellgren says

    February 6, 2013 at 7:52 am

    Jeff – thank you for all you are doing to keep us in the loop about this. We’ve got a few years before we have to really lock down our house – but your posts are keeping it front and center of mind.
    I’ve had to block some friends on Instagram due to porn they were liking. It seems every avenue that is out there for photo sharing is open to things like this…

    Reply
  5. Michelle Poccia says

    February 6, 2013 at 10:58 am

    Can I say that I am SO glad that my kids are grown and out of the house! I cannot imagine the dedication it takes to protect young children these days! I applaud you, Jeff (and others) for paying attention and yes, censoring what is coming into your homes and your children’s minds. Think of how many kids are out there unmonitored…sad to think about. Thanks for all these great thoughts. Thanks for leading by your example of doing something. Taking control in your own home…and sharing your knowledge with all of us.

    Reply
  6. Teri Lussier says

    February 6, 2013 at 11:52 am

    One of the things I learned from my kids when they were first on MySpace- the social network of choice when my kids were young- is that they monitor their own circle of friends, and as parents I don’t know that we tap into that resource often enough. My daughter in particular told me her friends watched out for each other online and would call someone out that they didn’t know, or confront a friend if they were socializing in ways that they didn’t like. This peer pressure is both good and bad of course, but I did take some comfort in knowing that a close circle of responsible friends at that age is crucial to keeping our kids safe. That is a conversation I think more parents need to have. How do our kids watch out for each other? Do they have each other’s back? Do they have their own systems and code words in place if someone needs help? Sometimes I think those relationships can be just as much, if not more useful in keeping our kids safe.

    Reply
    • Jeff Turner says

      February 7, 2013 at 12:01 pm

      “How do our kids watch out for each other? Do they have each other’s back? Do they have their own systems and code words in place if someone needs help? Sometimes I think those relationships can be just as much, if not more useful in keeping our kids safe.” This is such great advice.

      Reply
  7. Clifford Saint Claire the Beloved says

    February 8, 2013 at 12:25 am

    Yea you know before the internet children and teens had no idea that sex existed. They never talked about it with their friends. They never saw pictures, movies or drawings of it. They certainly never had sex themselves. LOL!

    The western cult of the child has been the ideological battering ram that has been used to spearhead every drive against freedom of speech and information in the last three decades. Limiting what’s available to adults because uneducated/unsupervised children might get a hold of it makes about as much sense as eliminating liquor stores because some teen might buy some vodka with a fake ID.

    Reply
    • Jeff Turner says

      February 8, 2013 at 7:33 am

      Yea you know, if porn on Tumblr were as difficult to get for my 10 year old as liquor at a liquor store, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. No one talking about limiting what’s available to adults here. Tumblr is a place where children and adults gather together, it’s not a liquor store, it’s not a sex shop, it’s not a strip club, and it’s not a clearly labeled porn site.

      And this isn’t about freedom of speech, or using children as an ideological battering ram. I’m not trying to eliminate porn. Consenting adults can do whatever consenting adults want to do. I’m saying, since you’re doing it in the same place my kids are invited to gather, I’m not letting my kids go there.

      Reply
  8. HM says

    February 15, 2013 at 9:26 am

    Everyone makes a lot of good points here; however, I don’t know if anyone is aware, but you can choose to block or blacklist certain keywords and hash tags. It’s how I keep my dash clean.

    Reply
    • Jeff Turner says

      February 20, 2013 at 1:35 pm

      It’s a great way of keeping your dashboard clean, but not particularly effective when accessing without a login.

      Reply
  9. Shawn says

    October 27, 2013 at 4:57 pm

    How did you block Tumblr?

    Reply
    • Jeff Turner says

      October 31, 2013 at 9:06 am

      I used OpenDNS and blocked the domain.

      Reply
  10. Beth says

    April 9, 2014 at 11:47 am

    Jeff, please explain how you used OpenDNS to block the domain for Tumblr for someone who is not extremely tech savvy. It is imperative that we block this on our Iphones as it is being used to access hardcore porn. Please help!

    Reply
    • Jeff Turner says

      April 9, 2014 at 12:17 pm

      Beth,

      When logged into OpenDNS, click on the settings tab. Select your home network and you will see in the middle of the page an option to “Manage Individual Domains.” It defaults to “always block” as the option, but you can change that to “never block” for any specific domain you choose. Just put in tumblr.com in that input field and save. That will do it. Let me know if that is not clear enough.

      Reply
  11. Jimbo says

    November 11, 2014 at 5:36 am

    Hi Jeff. Just found your article…

    What you explain to Beth in the comment above only serves to block tumblr.com itself does it not and not all of it’s subdomains? e.g. you’d still be able to access subdomain.tumblr.com which is the very problem. There are plenty of inappropriate Tumblr sites that you can access with ease.

    Unless I’m missing something, there’s no way to block all Tumblr sites. It would be impractical to add each individual unsuitable tumblr site you come across that is unsuitable as there are not only so many but new ones are cropping up all the time.

    Reply
    • Jeff Turner says

      November 11, 2014 at 6:26 am

      Actually, they give you the option to block all subdomains as well as redirects. So, even if the site is http://www.mysite.com and it points to tumblr, it will also be blocked.

      Reply
  12. Jimbo says

    November 27, 2014 at 2:37 am

    Turns out I hadn’t configured my DNS quite right leading me to believe the subdomain changes I was making wasn’t taking effect when it actual fact it does do the trick. Ignore me everyone! Cheers, Jeff.

    Reply
  13. James says

    October 13, 2015 at 1:28 pm

    Tumblr has a lot of redeeming qualities but sadly the reality is that Tumblr facilitates the distribution of porn by adults and under aged users to adults and under aged users. It is an “adult” site posing as a “social media blog” for the whole family.

    When I asked Tumblr to remove porn from a teen’s account they claimed:

    “Tumblr is a service that enables broad freedom of expression and therefore hosts a wide variety of content… Although we prohibit uploads of sexually explicit video, we do not prohibit the posting of adult-oriented material. ”

    They don’t care if they facilitate the distribution of porn by teens. Additionally, there is a LOT of sexually explicit video not to mention sexually explicit GIFs and sexually explicit photos. I’m no prude but much of it is way beyond erotica.

    Read this:
    http://www.jeffturner.info/why-i-blocked-tumblr-on-my-home-network/

    And this:
    http://hitomineko.tumblr.com/post/20086527192/stop-porn-on-tumblr

    And this:
    http://www.zdnet.com/article/adult-tumblr-blogs-now-removed-from-every-form-of-search-possible/

    And this:
    https://pando.com/2013/07/26/tumblr-porn-is-a-bigger-problem-than-yahoo-realizes/

    Let abuse@tumblr.com know how you feel.

    Reply

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