HOW TO BLOCK ADS AND MAINTAIN THE SUPERTRICK (hosts file - example 2)
Continuing from example 1:</span>
- Update your hosts file
- First, download and "save as" this UPDATED FILE (contains over 14,000 verified sites and about 500kb).
- Add it to your hosts file using HOSTS MANAGER
- Update your proxy configuration, even if you aren't behind a proxy
- Netscape Navigator
- Go to Edit->Preferences->Advanced->Proxies
- Select "Manual Proxy Configuration" (even if you aren't using a proxy) and click "View"
- From the final hosts file, after merging it with the one you downloaded, open the file in Wordpad and remove everything except the site addresses
- Replace the line breaks with a space to make the file as one line. Like this "000freexxx.com 039068a.dialer-select.com 1.httpads.com 1000stars.ru 100free.com 100free.de 100free.nl 123adult.com"
- Paste the results into "No Proxy For" box
This will tell Navigator to access these sites directly. Since your hosts file says they are the local machine, ad lookups will fail and you can surf in peace without distraction, with the added bonus that many web pages will load quite a bit faster- Internet Explorer 5.x+
- Go to Tools->Internet Options...->Connection tab
- Select your Connection (Dialup or LAN) & press "Settings" button
- Check "Use a proxy server for your..." checkbox
- Click "Bypass proxy server for local addresses" checkbox
- You are done - No need to add anything in "No Proxy For" box
- NOTES
- If you run a webserver on your PC
- All the servers in this file point to the ip 127.0.0.1 (localhost), you will need to open the “Hosts” file in a regular text editor (wordpad/bbedit/vim etc) and replace 127.0.0.1 for 127.0.0.2 or another "non-existant" ip address
- Alternatively you can simply download this dedicated Hosts file for servers with the ip set at 127.0.0.3 here. You will need to rename this file "Hosts"
- If you use the browser Mozilla , but after installing Hosts you keep getting a "connection refused.." error dialog
- This is a bug in Mozilla (version 1.1 and below) due to the browser not having a built in error page when a website/adserver cannot be contacted, therefore an alert dialog is used instead of error page
- This has been reported as a bug to the Mozilla project and is still awaiting to be set as a default setting into a release
- If you have Mozilla 1.2a or above you can add to your user preferences file (prefs.js) this line:
- user_pref("browser.xul.error_pages.enabled", true);
- This will stop the annoying dialog popup as 1.2a has the option to remove the dialog though this isn't enabled by default yet
- If you installed it and now you can't visit site X
- Then probably the site in question is in the "black" list and is stopping your visit
- check when you access the site does your taskbar/statusbar say "connecting to 127.0.0.1" if so then it is most likely within this file, in which case you will need to open this “Hosts” file in a text editor (wordpad/bbedit/vim etc) and search for the line that contains the address of the site that you want to visit
- Simply delete that line or place a # before the line which deactivates that particular entry, then reboot or re-flush your dns, and you will then be able to visit the site in question
- This Hosts file is designed to be extremely comprehensive and to get the best out of it some people will find they need to edit it manually to remove certain sites for their own browsing preferences (using the above instructions)
- Web sites will not be placed in this file if they have had no observed hostile activities or privacy breaches, and with banner advertising only the server from which the advert banner originates will be blocked and not the whole site
- The sorts of activity that determines addition to this file is:
- adverts, banners, multiple popup windows /exit pages, webbugs, script/java exploits, privacy breaches, dialer droppers, user tracking and counters, viruses, spyware, circle sites, spammer sites, underhand practices etc.
- If a site is visited and they have these kinds of activities going on, then they will most likely to be entered into this Hosts file by myself or other users who contribute to this project
- You can always use this program, Hosts Toggle to turn on/off the Hosts file with one click
- If you installed it and your Windows 2000 PC hangs every 10 minutes and/or is slow
- This seems to be a bug in Win2K as it will not handle large Hosts files such as this one, it can be worked around by 2 different methods, if you are not on a LAN network or use a direct connection to the internet (t1/dsl/adsl/cable) (modems untested but believed to work also) the first simple method is as follows
- Locate the hosts file you installed and rename to hosts.txt (this will disable it tempoarily)
- Right Click on "My Computer" on the desktop and choose "Manage"
- Scroll to the "services" section and locate "dns client" r-click on this and choose "properties"
- Stop the service and from the dropdown choose "disable"
- Rename "hosts.txt" back to "hosts" and you should be able to use the hosts file as normal, a reboot might be required to get it working fully
- This method has been known to work on many Win2k* setups without any adverse effects. Also known to work for some XP users who experience slow network startup and/or IE or OE is very slow to start, the procedure to disable the dns client is the same as above. Of course if you still have problems or cannot connect to the internet after implementing this workaround it is advised you do not use this Hosts file and restore the "dns client" back to an "automatic" state and restart the dns client. Alternativly you will need this software and see this page for implementing an advanced dns solution (for expert users only)
- If you installed it and can still see some banners
- After checking the obvious, have you got it installed in the correct location for your Operating system?
- Check to see if the banners image is coming from a different server than the one you are visiting (right click on banner and choose properties too see the web address of the images location)
- This is because some websites serve their banners from the same site as the content, in those cases a Hosts file will not block them as it would stop access to the entire site which isn't the idea, this Hosts file blocks access only if they have a seperate advert server to the main one and it is in this Hosts file, otherwise adverts will be seen
- If you use a specific web proxy (specified by your ISP's internet settings) then this Hosts file will not work as using a explicit proxy bypasses the Hosts file functionality. Please remember to that this file while being very comprehensive cannot include every banner server in the world and has included only the well known advertisers and mainly english speaking websites
- If you wish to have 100% advert free browsing then using something like the Promoxitron or Junkbuster proxy or Mozillas BannerBlind which will remove 99.9% of adverts
- How do you know if the file is working?
- Does this have a virus in it?
- No it doesn't, its only a plain text file so it cannot do any harm to your computer, there are no install programs or executable files just a simple single text file
- WINDOWS UPDATE NOTE: Akamai.net is used by Microsoft to host the Windows Update features, known as the "AutoUpdate" and "v4.windowsupdate.microsoft.com [63.209.144.181]". In addition, Akamai.net also hosts others, such as ad/spware websites.
So if either feature of the Windows Update is not working and/or you get "Windows Update Failure - Error Code 0x800A138F". Then close ALL broswers' windows, open hosts file, press {CTRL+F}->look for this address "a248.e.akamai.net [63.251.152.201]", without the brackets, and delete it then save and exit. Now try <span style='color:green'>https://a248.e.akamai.net/v4.windows...etmanifest.aspagain. If it works, then go to http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com and get your Updates. If it still does not work then your company or your ISP may be blocking this hostname. Or some anti-ad/spy programs may have this address blocked, such as SPYBLOCKER.
DO NOT DELETE ALL AKAMAI.NET SITES, OTHERWISE YOU WILL END UP WITH AD/SPY SITES POPING BACK.
Below is a small sample of hundreds of the Akamai.net servers that process ad/spy sites:
- 0.0.0.0 a08.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a10.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a100.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a100.g.akamaitech.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1016.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1028.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1032.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a104.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1040.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1061.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1066.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a108.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a11.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1100.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a111.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1156.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1168.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a117.g.akamaitech.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1172.g.akamaitech.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1180.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1196.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a12.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a12.g.akamaitech.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1208.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1224.g.akamaitech.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1228.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1234.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1240.g.akamaitech.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1252.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1261.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1284.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a13.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1300.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1316.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1356.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1360.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a1380.g.akamai.net
- 0.0.0.0 a14.g.akamai.net
Now continue to example 3
RELATING POSTS: comming soon...
RESULTS WILL VARY
No matter how good your systems may be, they're only as effective as what you put into them.
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