<div>I suppose you could run transparent proxies, but simply blocking traffic would cause many things to fail, as hard coded DNS settings are quite common in applications and devices.<br/>
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Andrew<br/><br/>-----Original Message-----<br/>From: michael.bethune@australiaonline.net.au<br/>To: james.braunegg@micron21.com<br/>Cc: AusNOG Mailing List <ausnog@ausnog.net><br/>Sent: Fri, 16 Dec 2016 9:33<br/>Subject: Re: [AusNOG] Internet companies forced to block The Pirate Bay, bittorrent websites in Australia, Federal Court rules<br/><br/></div>Quoting Mark Smith <<a href="mailto:markzzzsmith@gmail.com">markzzzsmith@gmail.com</a>>:
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> On 15 Dec. 2016 5:02 pm, "James Braunegg" <<a href="mailto:james.braunegg@micron21.com">james.braunegg@micron21.com</a>>
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> wrote:
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>
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...
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>
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> Once the sites are blocked, people who continue to visit the blocked sites
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> will see a warning page informing them the site cannot be accessed.
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>
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> The "landing page" as it is referred to, will be hosted by either the ISP
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> or the rights holder. ß What a nice attack target that will be for kids on
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> Holidays who can not download?
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>
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> So where is the official piece of paper?. And how will this stop users
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> from using <a href="http://8.8.8.8">8.8.8.8</a> for DNS.
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Of course, it is feasible to require ISPs to block use of external DNS
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servers...
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Just saying.
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Kind regards
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<br/>
Michael Bethune
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Australia On Line
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