IMHO the blacklist is just a starting point. Although a list exists on the squidguard site, there are many lists located elsewhere (and several organizations make their lists available for download). Then there are several scripts available that will download, check for dupes, and put things where they are supposed to go.
If you want something prepackaged, Dansguardian is a good choice. I prefer squidguard due to its freeness (as in licensing) and it does all that I need. David OliMon, Jul 19, 2004 at 01:52:05PM -0400, Greg Hester wr te: > Good Response! ;-) > > I guess my big concern is the blacklist. How often is that updated? I sent > some updates but have not heard anything about them being included. > > Thanks! > Greg > > > From: "David Bronson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Date: Mon, 19 Jul 2004 12:27:15 -0400 > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: Re: Squidguard still active? > > Reached perfection would be my vote. Nothing needs fixing. > > We use it in many locations, it is well documented and reliable. What > more could one need. > > David > > On Mon, Jul 19, 2004 at 04:11:19PM +0200, Evert Meulie wrote: > > Hi everyone! > > > > I was just wondering whether the SquidGuard project is still active(ly > > maintained)? > > > > www.squidguard.org hasn't been updated for 2 years now. This usually means > > that either the project has reached perfection, or that it has died. ;-) > > > > Which is it...? 8-) > > > > > > Greetings/Hilsen, > > Evert > > > > > >
