supercruiser wrote: I wonder about two things: how much damage the porn on the site caused. Could some parents have said, "son, you can't go to that discussion site anymore because of the bad things on it"
As a parent to a 1, 5 and 15 year old, I can tell you that there are far worse things than a forum in a hobby they're interested in having a couple of clearly labelled spam posts... Have you ever seen the
sort of thing that comes up if you mis-spell Disney on a Google search? Weird as it is, some porn sites deliberately target child sites and their common mis-spellings... A hobby site with posts with subjects that have NOTHING to do with the hobby don't worry me... At that point, it's a case of educating your child rather than banning them - teaching them to keep themselves safe will always be a more effective way of looking after them - unless you can guarantee you'll ALWAYS be behind their shoulder every time they interact with the internet (let me tell you that my 15 y/o school doesn't ban all porn images - I've found printed pages of them from his school in his bedroom before
)
supercruiser wrote: and most likely: It's a sign of the times. Young kids just aren't interested in spending the time and effort to build a model airplane.
This I 100% agree with. My friends at work and at fencing (who are all 30-45) can't understand why I'm putting the effort in. My boss (who's only 36 odd) got bought a polystyrene RC aeroplane for Christmas year before last - and can't understand why I don't just buy something like that for the instant gratification. Doesn't get the concept that even when the spitfire plunges into the ground nose first and becomes so much kindling wood on her maiden flight I'll still be chuffed to know that I built something that stood chance of flying
with my own hands. Try as I might, I can't get that concept across.
supercruiser wrote: If you can... encourage and mentor a young person to get started and enjoy this hobby. I think the benefits and rewards are lifelong.
Agreed.