This morning we launched a new service that will undoubtedly change the way budget-conscious network operators and IT administrators filter Web content. The system that powers the service is inspired by the success of PhishTank, our anti-phishing site, and works in a similar way. By leveraging the intelligence of our community (all of you) and our global network of servers we can provide a level Web content filtering that is robust and effective. And, like everything else we do here, we’re offering this for free.
Here’s how our game-changing system works:
People add Web sites to our system and tag them with a category. For example YouTube.com would be appropriately tagged “video sharing” and MySpace.com would be appropriately tagged “Social Networks.” Other users come along and verify the accuracy of the submitters tag by voting. Once a site crosses a predetermined threshold of votes, it gets added into the category in the OpenDNS system. All this adding and voting happens on our new Community Site - if you haven’t yet seen it, stop by and cast a few votes. Every day this system will get more and more comprehensive, thanks to the help of 100s of 1000s of IT folks who have accounts with us and the millions of OpenDNS users.
You probably already understand why this is far superior to the way security companies categorize sites and deliver filtering services, but allow me to explain briefly the three main reasons our service is better:
- It’s more comprehensive. Our system has tens of thousands of people like you submitting and verifying the accuracy of Web sites’ inclusion in categories. This is in stark contrast to the handful of people employed for this job by security companies.
- It’s faster moving. New Web sites and changes to existing Web sites are constantly being published to the Internet. Other Web content filtering tools update only once nightly, or even less frequently, and therefore fail to catch and categorize everything right away. OpenDNS has the advantage of tens of thousands of people adding and tagging sites at any given time, so users benefit from real-time updates.
- It’s free to use. No longer are you forced to pay top dollar to security companies simply to protect your networks.
Log in to your dashboard now and you’ll see the new filtering categories available to you, and know it will get better and more thorough with time. We launched with just over 30 categories, but if you have a need to block a category not represented in our system let us know and we’ll be happy to accommodate.
Finally, this service (like everything else we offer) is optional and can be enabled in your free OpenDNS account. Let us know if you have any feedback, about any part of the system or how it works. We built this for you.




Brian
A couple quick items:
1) how can you add a category? For example, one I think that should be included is “reference” (tfd.com, dictionary.com, wikipedia.com)
2)I’m noticing duplicate entries for the same site. example: www.cnn.com and cnn.com; www.webmd.com, webmd.com. Some sites do differentiate (craigslist.com vs. dallas.craigslist.com), but I think www.blah.com and blah.com are usually the same site.
posted on February 21st, 2008 at 4:41 am
Sandy
This is great, you guys keep getting better and better!
posted on February 22nd, 2008 at 2:30 pm
Jacob Egan
Good Job, KEEP IT UP!
posted on February 22nd, 2008 at 5:03 pm
Mark Mathson
Like the Energizer Bunny…
posted on February 26th, 2008 at 2:09 pm
Expert Texture » Dynamic IP and OpenDNS? Watch out.
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posted on February 27th, 2008 at 12:31 pm
suoko
You just need a way to tag sites similar to delicious (with the relative firefox extension!) and you could face google empire.
Good work
posted on March 22nd, 2008 at 3:31 am
Sammy Nguyen
Gr8 for blocking. Speed? not really in Asia. Asians are waiting for ur servers.
posted on April 18th, 2008 at 10:43 am
Brett Schulte
Hey David - what about a way to block advertising using OpenDNS? We know you CAN do it, why not let the users decide?
posted on May 4th, 2008 at 3:10 am
Leon Quinn
Great service, well done..
posted on June 12th, 2008 at 10:36 am