 pnh102Reptiles Are Cuddly And PrettyPremium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD 1 edit | reply to fantomposter
Re: Ugh... said by fantomposter: They will, sooner or later. It is the cheapest way for them to fix the problem. No staff to investigate complaints...just lock it all down at the router.
You're correct... simply blocking the port is the easiest (but IMO the most aggravating) way to solve the problem. What bothers me though is that when the next major Internet annoyance comes along, they will just block the port for that too, and so on and so forth, until the whole damn connection is useless.
Next you'll hear of ISPs blocking port 80 to eliminate popup ads and spyware downloads. -- Keep America Strong! Bush/Cheney 2004 |
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 nixenRockin' the BoxenPremium join:2002-10-04 Alexandria, VA | said by pnh102: Next you'll hear of ISPs blocking port 80 to eliminate popup ads and spyware downloads.
Your ISP may already be "blocking" port 80 and you won't know it. Several ISPs do transparent proxying of web traffic. All traffic gets forwarded through HTTP caching systems. They do it to help eliminate redundant traffic from their networks and improve the overal browsing experience by speeding things up (at least static content).
-tom -- "There are 10 types of people in the world... those who understand binary and those who don't." "That's only 2 types of people, moron" |
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 QumahlinNever Enough TimePremium,MVM join:2001-10-05 united state | Comcast did do that for a short while, but stopped after complaints. -- Forum Posts:4326 |
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| reply to nixen said by nixen: said by pnh102: Next you'll hear of ISPs blocking port 80 to eliminate popup ads and spyware downloads.
Your ISP may already be "blocking" port 80 and you won't know it. Several ISPs do transparent proxying of web traffic. All traffic gets forwarded through HTTP caching systems. They do it to help eliminate redundant traffic from their networks and improve the overal browsing experience by speeding things up (at least static content).
-tom
My ISP has that as an optional service meant to benefit dialup users (speed up downloading graphics, etc). All you do is just point your browser to their proxy. Didn't really help with DSL.... |
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 | reply to Qumahlin Verizon does that, it is pretty transparent though.
Still, something many do not know.... |
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