That's very odd. I'd try calling them... There are quite a few folks blocking 
proxies these days. What I do is remove the via and forwarded for headers with 
the following command:
check_hostnames off
forwarded_for delete
via off

I realize this breaks the RFC, but lest be blocked if detected as a squid 
proxy. sux



Best regards,
The Geek Guy

Lawrence Pingree
http://www.lawrencepingree.com/resume/

Author of "The Manager's Guide to Becoming Great"
http://www.Management-Book.com
 


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, June 27, 2014 4:43 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Fwd: Re: [squid-users] google picking up squid as

> How about contacting google for advise?
> They are the one that forces you to the issue.
> They don't like it that you have a 1k clients behind your IP address.
> They should tell you what to do.
> You can tell them that you are using squid as a forward proxy to 
> enforce usage acls on users inside the network.
> It's not a share to use squid...
> It's a shame that you cannot get a reasonable explanation to the 
> reason you are blocked...
>
There is only 1 client behind the IP address as it is a test server so 
something is going wrong with either routing or requests to google.
Google will not answer any emails.
I suppose one alternative is to use unbound in conjunction with squid and not 
redirect any requests to google?



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