Your Replies
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Hi
Do you mind sending your list of domains to support@cleanbrowsing.org? We’d love to see what you have.
Thanks
If anyone would like to block Twitter, you can easily do it on the paid plans. There is no monetary incentive to keep it open on the free service. The problem is that it’s too decisive amongst users. For now, those that want to block social platforms like Twitter, Instagram, etc.. you can easily do it on the Basic plans for as low as $5.99 / month.
Thanks
Hi
I completely understand, and we sincerely appreciate you making the submissions. Thanks for the recommendation.
Tony
Hi
Yes, you could use the paid service. It allows you to create custom block lists that will affect your network within minutes.
Thanks
Hi
That’s odd, I’m not seeing it blocked here: https://dnsblacklist.org/?domain=blogspot.com
Can you give me some examples that you are finding to be blocked?
Thanks
Hi
Thanks for the list. I’ve gone through and added them to the review process. Speaking of which, I encourage you to read this because you can help us in the recategorization process as well. 🙂
One thing to note, we won’t block search engines on the free filters, but it is something you can do for your network via the paid options.
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Hi
You can block search engines that don’t offer Safe Search on the paid plans. The Free service does not restrict sites that don’t offer safe search, but does enforce it when it’s available. Sites like Qwant don’t offer a safe search feature.
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Hi John
Have you tried clearing your cache? Also, can you go to dnsleaktest.com and run the standard test? What are you getting as the output?
Thanks
Oh nice! Do you have the instructions for how you did that with DD-WRT? Would love to share it on here if you do.
Tony
Hi
Sorry for the delayed response here. Are you looking for a failsafe to the devices, or the router?
It’s going to be kind of tough to do a failsafe for a router if someone pushes on the “reset” button on the device. : /
As for each device, think it will depend on how you have things configured. You could deploy a network firewall to force all DNS to your preferred DNS provider. This would override any local settings on the network. It’s essentially hijacking the DNS on your own network.
Tony
Hi
Sorry for the delayed response. This should not be blocked any more.
Tony