Then that part to restricting elsewhere should be approached, because that is outside the juridiction of the ownership and is a parent/child relation and should be handled in that particular format of "If I go elsewhere why am I restricted?".Soldier of Entropy wrote:Okay, at the time I don't know if it could be assumed, but let me clarify that he was right in this case; the parent does.Ghost Rider wrote:You're shitting me? You're assuming something to go "He restricts elsewhere." We don't know, thus you want to pull something out of your ass to make the situation favor you?Darth Servo wrote: THATS a red herring since the parent probably restricts the kid's time on the net regardless of if the kid surfs at home or at the library.
Fucking A, you know that doesn't fly.
That is another case altogether since the first is a matter of who owns what, the second is a matter of whether the child is trustworthy and responsible and how much/little does the parent trust the child. This is a case where hypocrisy is based upon whether or not the child has earned the respect to demonstrate not abuse said internet, or is the parent being oppressive just to simply exert power.