 LinklistPremium join:2002-03-03 Longport, NJ kudos:5 | Financial incentive to use more than DNS block With big fines facing the ISPs involved, maybe they will use something other than a plain vanilla DNS block. How about them changing routing tables in the ISPs routers to black hole the IP addresses involved. And then also block all the proxy servers they can find. -- »www.rickperry.org/ |
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 kxrm join:2002-07-18 Fort Worth, TX | Might as well block the internet. |
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 | +1 to kxrm There is no easy way to accomplish this. There are too many ways around too many of the possible fixes. VPN, proxies, etc, anyone determined enough to get to that website will still be able to, regardless of what the ISP puts in place (read: Determined) |
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 OlegBellsouth FastaccessPremium join:2003-12-08 Birmingham, AL kudos:2 | reply to Linklist Well there is always VPN option to consider. |
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 | reply to Jpres13 A simple free proxy would do the trick. |
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 fuziwuziNot born yesterdayPremium join:2005-07-01 Atlanta, GA | reply to Linklist said by Linklist:With big fines facing the ISPs involved, maybe they will use something other than a plain vanilla DNS block. How about them changing routing tables in the ISPs routers to black hole the IP addresses involved. And then also block all the proxy servers they can find. You would love the internet in China. -- Teabaggers: Destroying America is Priority #1 |
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