What ever you use to stop kazaa traffic will have to be able to read packet headers. If the default kazaa port is blocked, kazaa can operate on port 80 and appear as web traffic. It's possible, but kazaa is crafty.
On Mon, 2003-08-11 at 10:13, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Hi, > > I found that my lan users are using kazaa and consuming lots of > bandwidth. I know that we can block kazaa via iptables or 3rd party > tools but Is it possible to stop kazaa from squid also? > > With Regards > Nabin Limbu -- Michael Gargiullo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Warp Drive Networks -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list