On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 11:39 pm, Herman wrote:
> James Gray wrote:
> > On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 04:10 pm, Ken.Thomson@audit.nsw.gov.au wrote:
> >>I am running Squid 2.5STABLE5 and trying to block a few of the more
> >>prominent web advertisements that chew bandwidth.
> >
> > Seems you're reinventing the wheel.  Why not use an
> > off-the-shelf-redirector called "BannerFilter"?  We've been using it
> > quite effectively for nearly 2 years without any problems at all.  Check
> > it out:
> > http://www.phroggy.com/bannerfilter/
> > James
>
> Hmm, what is the dis/advantage of Bannerfilter over SquidGuard?
>
> Herman
[Top posting fixed]
Bannerfilter just filters banners and ads, replacing them with a basic 
transparent GIF, empty SWF, or empty JS code.  It doesn't do the whole 
web-site blocking thing, which manglement (sic) have told me is not allowed 
at our site - they believe the policy will be sufficient without any 
enforcement.  Politics - ugh!
I have no interest other than as a satisfied user of bannerfilter.  If  you 
only want to replace banner ads etc, and not restrict access beyond that, 
it's a good option IMHO.
Cheers,
James
Received on Tue Oct 26 2004 - 18:00:28 MDT
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