Posted by admin On December - 26 - 2009


Block websites on your computer. Broadband Internet connectivity is so common these days that almost no one has a second thought about connecting to the Internet. Connecting is easy, but what if you need to control or restrict the ways in which the Internet connection is to be used? Sure enough, widespread availability of unlimited, unmetered Internet connections has its pros. But what about the contras?

Everybody is talking about nowadays how fast their connection is. Fast and unlimited maybe fine for the most home users, but this is not necessarily the same for work or study environments, public places, or specific age groups. The Internet contains enough threats such as spyware and viruses to make you wish to restrict access to certain resources. A virus can corrupt or destroy information on your PC, causing you spending days to recover data. Spyware steals your personal information and slows down your computer’s performance, making it a pain to work on. While it is usually possible to fix a PC contaminated with spyware and viruses, it is much safer and easier to prevent the infection in the first place – by restricting the browsing to the list of known, safe Web sites.

Restrict Internet browsing in Internet Explorer to the defined list of safe Web sites with Ashkon Software WebAllow http://www.weballow.com! WebAllow prevents electronic infections by block access to all but selected preapproved Web sites in Internet Explorer, effectively protecting your computer from spyware and viruses. If a user on your computer tries to access a website that is not on the list of allowed sites, she is redirected to a Web page of your choice to inform her about your access restriction policy.

While viruses and spyware sound familiar enough, Internet threats are not limited to those. The Internet offers a great variety of resources that are not always appropriate for your audience. Online computer games may be fine for the kids, but they can occupy the employees’ attention in an office. Online chats, forums and blogs are popular among students and office employees, occupying their time and taking away from their study or work – wasting valuable time. Finally, while certain Web sites may be appropriate for adults, these same sites are not likely to make you smile when accessed by your children due to coarse language or adult content.

Use WebAllow at home to block all but kid-safe Web sites on your home PC. Use it in the office to prevent your employees wasting their time playing computer games, chatting on the forums or reading breakdown news. Use the same product in the school, college or university to concentrate students’ attention on their study by only allowing access to their online class materials. Install WebAllow in a store or in a library and allow your customers to access your book or product catalog and nothing else. Do not let your computer users misuse Internet connection with WebAllow!

When installed, WebAllow is easy to configure by the administrator, and impossible to disable or uninstall by the regular users. It embeds into Internet Explorer and makes it impossible to visit Web sites other than defined. WebAllow is light on memory and disk space, and is perfect to be used on any computer type from powerful workstations to public computers with small memory and hard drives.

Once configured, WebAllow requires absolutely zero administration and runs completely unattended. WebAllow will improve your personal privacy and computer security, protect your kids, increase employee performance and motivate students. Download evaluation copy for free at http://www.weballow.com/

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8 Responses to “Block websites on your computer”

    Fabian Delancey
    January 3rd, 2010 at 16:43

    Thanks Abunch! I have been looking for this information all day today. My HP is not running like it should and I need to figure out how to fix it quickly. I have bookmarked your post so other users can find it to on reddit.

    John Webber
    January 9th, 2010 at 20:45

    I’m looking into this whole thing at moment. Need to read up on it big time!

    Jack Johnsons
    January 13th, 2010 at 06:01

    I don’t know what to think about this. I’ll have to process this for a bit. Very interesting though.

    Rick James
    January 14th, 2010 at 15:20

    I enjoy these type of discussions. It is great to hear what other’s opinions are. What do you guys think?

    Margaret Sockalosky
    January 17th, 2010 at 19:30

    Like your blog :-) I’ll check your site later again.

    Joann Yuen
    January 24th, 2010 at 02:21

    Its good to see some good people keeping their site up, one of my other favorite sites quit working the other day for no appearant reason

    Emmaline Stober
    February 22nd, 2010 at 07:20

    Hi from Russia! May i quote a submit within your weblog using the link to you? I’ve tried emailing you regarding this issue but it appears i cant reach you, please reply when have a moment, thanks.

    admin
    February 22nd, 2010 at 09:11

    sure you can



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