There may be patches for junkbuster to do this sort of thing. I think in this type of situation, though, it would probably be better to develop a whitelist of acceptable URLs/IP ranges, let those through, and block everything else. This should work until the child roots your OpenBSD firewall, or he visits his friend's house or public library with the non-firewalled non-filtered connection. ObJLF: You know, you could combine my anonymous web proxy with the jarjargonizer to bypass a web content filter... D * On Mon, Jul 31, 2000 at 04:24:50PM -0700, Kevin Saling wrote: > Wow, I've been away from the PLUG list for a long time. Good to be back. I > searched through the archives, but did not find any relevant threads... so > here goes. > > I am trying to create a web content filter at the choke point of my network > that will provide a safe web surfing environment for children downstream (on > the internal LAN). I can do this directly on the firewall (OpenBSD ) > or on a separate Linux server (maybe a squid box). Doesn't matter. > > Basically, the hard part has been finding something that provides keyword > searching of incoming html pages. There are tons of URL filters out there, > but that's _not_ what I'm looking for. Squid apparently doesn't have an API > that provides access to the actual data stream (just URL's) so a squid > module doesn't seem likely. > > So, in the end, my tireless searching (and my friend Stephen ) has > turned up ActiveGuardian and JunkEx as possible options. Unfortunately, > ActiveGuardian's web forum is not encouraging and JunkEx refuses to install > for me. > > References: > ActiveGuardian www.activeguardian.com > JunkEx www.inf.tu-dresden.de/~ob6/ > > Anyone been down this road already? Care to share your experiences? > > ...Kevin > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss