I used a hosts file a while back which resolved a bunch of ad sites to 127.0.0.1. This kept me from having to see lots of ads, but instead I saw lots of 404 errors. Is this file you suggest the same approach or something else? Can one do includes in a hosts file? So, for instance, I could break out the blocked sites into a bunch of smaller lists and selectively include the ones I wanted to block? thanks, alex Siri Amrit Kaur wrote: >On Tuesday 30 August 2005 01:23 pm Josh Coffman kindly wrote: > > >> I don't have a machine to use to route web traffi >>through so I would want something on each machine >>(desktop & laptop) that is configurable per user. My >>wife and I wouldn't need as strict of filtering. >> >>Can anyone make a recomendation? >> >> >> >For something extremely quick and simple to install, I recommend a >hosts file. The following link has some great ones that are updated >frequently. It lists thousands of sites that, once in your /etc/hosts >file, will not be able to access your machine. These are mostly ad >sites (so it makes surfing really nice). It also has a number of >adult sites listed. The current hosts file was updated a few days ago >and lists over 47,000 sites. > >They also have a "Porn Sites" list that has even more adult sites >listed. It's not updated as frequently as the regular hosts file. >It's the basic hosts file, with porn sites from >http://research.internetfilter.com/research.php added to it. The porn >site file was last updated in January. I think it has some 60,000+ >sites listed. > >I like hosts files because they don't require any special software or >hardware, and they don't require any more skill than using a text >editor. As root, you just copy and paste the plain text file listing >the banned servers into /etc/hosts. If the file blocks something you >want, just put a # mark at the beginning of the line for that server. >Before putting in a hosts file, copy your original hosts file and >save it. Then try the new hosts file. If you find you dont' like >using it, you can just delete it and put your original one back in >place. > >Once you have a hosts file in place, delete the cache from your >browsers and you won't get any more banner ads. Nice! > >I've used a hosts file for years, ever since a houseguest once used my >computer (in the guestroom) for porn. HTH- Siri Amrit > >Get hosts files: >http://remember.mine.nu/ >--------------------------------------------------- >PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us >To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: >http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > > > --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss