.
It can be, it is just that nobody spent the time to properly develop such a filter. The Linux Security Module framework has the required functionality. All you need is a custom kernel.
i thought the whole way it works is through backend?
I don’t understand. Can you explain to me?
i have never really used Linux but from my understanding is that it all runs through commands and stuff and that any program you put on it could just be deleted through the command line so there is no proper filter for it?
Depends on what you call a filter.
Filtering the Internet, even if it can be bypassed, is possible, and there’s an unofficial version of NetFree for Linux.
This is a perfect example of software that isn’t available on Linux because
If Linux would be more widely used, there would be filtering for it.
If it can be bypassed then that is not much of a filter its like putting Egate on someones phone and then giving them the code not such a great filter
What is this?
True it would force the mainstream filters like Techloq and Gentech to make a filter for it
Exactly my point.
A filter
its impossible to bypass?
Doubt it, like I said, its an unofficial software for the NetFree filter, made by a 3rd party.
It enforces NetFree’s DNS.
if its possible to bypass then its like putting on egate and giving them the password
It all depends on how hard it is to bypass, and how knowledgeable the person using it is.
Can’t filter with software.
but, if your ISP is filtered (Like Rimon or NetFree in Isarel) is work (need to install CA)
I have dual boot - Ubuntu and Win11
There is no windows filter for a computer that doesn’t have a simple bypass… Just doesn’t exist (at least not to my knowledge)
Oh, it does. Just not in the general tech community. In the Mennonite internet filtering space, there are several that are very bypass resistant, including one my company just developed.
https://prismfilter.dev/
Is it ever going to be released??
Yes, we are in late stage beta testing right now.