Kevin, You can block them across the enterprise using squidGuard and redirecting to a 1 pixel by 1 pixel transparent gif file. (I've attached one for your use.)
I've been fairly successful in eliminating the majority of those <Your blinking monkey is not optimized, click here for $1,000,000 today!> ads. The problem that I was mentioning is that I've been to a couple of sites this week that are returning a blank page unless I turn off my ad blocking. These are pages that worked fine in the past. I visited a new site (first visit for me) within the past couple of weeks and the page I received said something to the effect: ----------------------- *** You have been diverted to this page instead of the page you requested. *** You are apparently running software that is blocking the appearance of ads in web pages. The income that I receive from ad click-throughs partially offsets my cost of providing this web site, and allows me to offer it free to you. If you would like to visit my web site please turn off your ad-blocking software and refresh this page. ----------------------- I turned off the ad block, hit refresh and it worked. I think we'll see that spreading, and I'm wondering how they are doing it. Rick -----Original Message----- From: Kevin White [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2002 10:39 AM To: Rick Matthews Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Block my ads? Can't see my page! Rick, Though I've not tried this, the best thing I've heard to do is to use your hosts file to redirect all those banner ad sites to your local machine. Since the name resolves to localhost and the file won't exist, the ads just won't load. You can read more about this at this link. http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~atman/spam/adblock.shtml You can obtain a good lists of hosts there or you can do google searchs for more recent files like this one which is as current as december. http://everythingisnt.com/hosts.html Hope this helps, -- Kevin White, Linux+, A+
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