http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2084381/blocking-vpn-students-blocked-websites.html
 
<http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2084381/blocking-vpn-students-blocked-websites.html>



Justin Wilson
j...@mtin.net

---
http://www.mtin.net Owner/CEO
xISP Solutions- Consulting – Data Centers - Bandwidth

http://www.midwest-ix.com  COO/Chairman

> On Jan 4, 2016, at 3:48 PM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> As an ISP why are you wasting your time 'blocking' anything other than 
> standard ACLs like port 139/windows file sharing?  It's not your duty or 
> responsibility. If people want to implement their own firewall at their 
> self-owned router/CPE, let them, or if they want to buy some net nanny 
> software for their end point device, that's their responsibility.
> 
> An ISP is a pipe. 
> 
> On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 7:42 AM, Nate Burke <n...@blastcomm.com 
> <mailto:n...@blastcomm.com>> wrote:
> We're dealing with a customer who is trying to block porn from their house.  
> The person who has the 'problem' is tech savvy, and is using VPN Services.  
> Is there any way to block someone like this?  I'm guessing any content 
> filtering wouldn't work because the VPN is terminating on the computer behind 
> the router.  Any sort of IP or DNS Block they would be able to bypass.  Is 
> there any way to stop a tech person from getting what they want?  Right now 
> our only thought is to put in like a 10k/s queue on their connection during 
> the overnight hours.  Other options?
> 

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