Zap's P2P Protection Blocklist

Our Peer Guardian & uTorrent P2P Blocklist.
(Includes ipfilter.dat to feed your bittorrent application.)

UPDATED MONTHLY NEAR THE FIRST OF THE MONTH

Well, at least on months I can be bothered to do it anymore... check date -->

"What is a blocklist?" It is a database file of internet addresses that you wish to keep out of a system. "Okay then, what is a P2P blocklist?" It is a specialized blocklist that seeks to avoid connections with known file polluters (bogons), businesses, government organizations, and other people you don't wish to connect for file transfers with."So what is so special about your blocklist?" it is very large, and contains most of the above organizations, in a global scope. Also, people working within many of these organizations, probably shouldn't be connecting to public file transfers, as per recend guidelines released by the Deparment of Homeland Security. As a matter of fact, it blocks over 50% of the internet from participating in a file tranfer, yet has never affected my ability to download or upload any file I want. I just rarely ever have problems with corrupted files.

Support your rights to privacy and data integrity!
Settle up with Sony BMG

First off, you may notice alot of universities, military, and other nerdy things are blocked in here. Why is this? Because most modern block list "IP-walls" have a port 80 Bypass that allows free and clear surfing (and serving!), while maintaining a hard lock on all other ports. I commend Phoenix Labs for trailblazing this feature, and only ask that in the future they add the functionality for ports 443, 21, and 23, or a small list of self determined ports. Perhaps diode control would be nice too.

   To use this list you will need to go get Peer Guardian 2 from Phoenix Labs (There are other programs, but I have had better times with PG2 as of late). You will also need 7-Zip to unarchive it, as I am no longer supporting the proprietary .zip format (besides, you would have to be an idiot to not to want to switch to it's superior performance). I should, as an aferthought mention that both of these programs are FREE and GNU GPL / OPEN SOURCE.

(Thanks to the boys at Bluetack for their lists from which I compile this one)
(MD5 & SHA1 Checksums generated from filealyser from safer networking ltd.)