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Hi
Ok, so I see some wonkiness with some of the commands.
1 – It looks like you’re using your “Ethernet” interface. You don’t need to set up your “Lookpback” one. So can ignore those commands.
2 – Your machine is using is IPv4 DNS IP’s. You ran the netsh for IPv4, but you provided an IPv6 address. Try running these commands:
netsh interface ipv4 set dns "Wi-Fi" static 185.228.168.168 primary netsh interface ipv4 add dns "Wi-Fi" 185.228.169.168 index=2
Hi
Are you able to provide a screenshot of what you’re seeing? Would love to see the command prompt window with the commands you are using.
Hi
Are you able to provide a screenshot of what you’re seeing? Would love to see the command prompt window with the commands you are using.
Hi David
No problem, we’ll be happy to help.
For starters, you can always reference our guide here for Windows 10: https://cleanbrowsing.org/guides/windows
Configuring CleanBrowsing on your local machine is straight forward. The fastest way is to use something called command prompt.
You will want to run it as the administrator (you can do this by right-clicking the option in your start menu). Once you open the command prompt, you’ll want to run two separate commands in the window that pops up.
Commands to run:
netsh interface ipv4 set dns "Wi-Fi" static 185.228.168.168 primary netsh interface ipv4 add dns "Wi-Fi" 185.228.169.168 index=2
Now you can go to this site: dnsleaktest.com and run the standard test. These instructions help you verify if the local DNS was configured correctly: https://cleanbrowsing.org/guides/how-to-verify-cleanbrowsing-dns-configured
If you have any other questions, please let me know.
Hi
Thank you for finding these. We’ve recategorized the sites. Please give it 24 hours to reflect in the DNS filters.
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This reply was modified 2 years, 11 months ago by
Daniel Cid.
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This reply was modified 2 years, 11 months ago by