If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Rating: | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
I have Win7 Sp1
Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On Sun, 06 May 2012 13:14:21 +1000, Peter Jason wrote:
I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter Right click on the folder and select properties. Select share tab. Select advanced settings and click. Untick the share box. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
Peter Jason wrote:
I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. How often do you actually have multiple EXEs in the same folder? It seems to me that would be a rare occurrence as programs tend to use separate folders and sub-folders all to themselves - which is the prudent way to construct your drive. Please don't say you actually choose to install more than one to a folder... |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On Sun, 6 May 2012 04:07:42 +0000 (UTC), Sam Hill wrote:
Peter Jason wrote: I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. How often do you actually have multiple EXEs in the same folder? It seems to me that would be a rare occurrence as programs tend to use separate folders and sub-folders all to themselves - which is the prudent way to construct your drive. Please don't say you actually choose to install more than one to a folder... I do. I see nothing wrong with that. When you install the program, the program determines the proper path to use. If it doesn't, you're screwed. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
???
That doesn't meet the op's request 'block all the *programs* in a particular folder (*.exe)' Unsharing a folder doesn't prevent a program's outbound Internet access. Do you think your Programs Files folder is shared with the Internet ? -- ....winston msft mvp mail "richard" wrote in message ... My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter Right click on the folder and select properties. Select share tab. Select advanced settings and click. Untick the share box. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
Peter Jason wrote:
I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter You would also want to block com, msi, and scr. I use zone alarm and it easily does what you want. Windows default firewall I don;t know. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On 05/05/2012 11:14 PM, Peter Jason wrote:
I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming& outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter Most of the time, shared folders won't get shared onto the Internet anyways, the firewall rules will prevent them from being shared to outside addresses. Are you really talking about preventing them from being shared onto the "Internet" or are you really talking about preventing sharing on your LAN? Yousuf Khan |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
richard wrote:
On Sun, 6 May 2012 04:07:42 +0000 (UTC), Sam Hill wrote: Peter Jason wrote: I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. How often do you actually have multiple EXEs in the same folder? It seems to me that would be a rare occurrence as programs tend to use separate folders and sub-folders all to themselves - which is the prudent way to construct your drive. Please don't say you actually choose to install more than one to a folder... I do. I see nothing wrong with that. When you install the program, the program determines the proper path to use. If it doesn't, you're screwed. You seem to be confused. "The program determines the proper path" - exactly. How many of your installed-by-you programs have chosen the same path/directory as a previously installed program? Or even those /not/ installed by you? If you do install programs in the same folder, you create the chance for same-named files to overwrite previous files and screw up the installation of the previous one. So, yes, if /you/ choose same-path, you /are/ screwed. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On Sun, 6 May 2012 10:50:34 +0000 (UTC), Sam Hill wrote:
richard wrote: On Sun, 6 May 2012 04:07:42 +0000 (UTC), Sam Hill wrote: Peter Jason wrote: I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. How often do you actually have multiple EXEs in the same folder? It seems to me that would be a rare occurrence as programs tend to use separate folders and sub-folders all to themselves - which is the prudent way to construct your drive. Please don't say you actually choose to install more than one to a folder... I do. I see nothing wrong with that. When you install the program, the program determines the proper path to use. If it doesn't, you're screwed. You seem to be confused. "The program determines the proper path" - exactly. How many of your installed-by-you programs have chosen the same path/directory as a previously installed program? Or even those /not/ installed by you? If you do install programs in the same folder, you create the chance for same-named files to overwrite previous files and screw up the installation of the previous one. So, yes, if /you/ choose same-path, you /are/ screwed. Which is one of the reasons better programs will create a folder named for their product. And if that's a problem, just reinstall the program in a different folder name. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On Sun, 06 May 2012 03:07:57 -0500, Paul in
Houston TX wrote: Peter Jason wrote: I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter You would also want to block com, msi, and scr. I use zone alarm and it easily does what you want. Windows default firewall I don;t know. Thanks, I use only the Windows Security Essentials now. I'll check to see if has this capability too. |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On Sun, 06 May 2012 04:20:00 -0400, Yousuf Khan
wrote: On 05/05/2012 11:14 PM, Peter Jason wrote: I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming& outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter Most of the time, shared folders won't get shared onto the Internet anyways, the firewall rules will prevent them from being shared to outside addresses. Are you really talking about preventing them from being shared onto the "Internet" or are you really talking about preventing sharing on your LAN? Yousuf Khan I have only a single computer. I want to stop software vendors sending me emails and upgrade notices. I assume they my can read one's program folders at will and I want to lock them out. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On 5/5/2012 11:14 PM, Peter Jason wrote:
I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming& outgoing; and it's tedious. Peter If it was me, then I would go to the NTFS security on the folder and remove permissions for all user accounts but mine, and that would block access to the folder. You could do the same thing by deleting all user accounts off of the folder but your account and block that way too. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On 06/05/2012 6:10 PM, Peter Jason wrote:
I have only a single computer. I want to stop software vendors sending me emails and upgrade notices. I assume they my can read one's program folders at will and I want to lock them out. No, the vendors don't read your folders at will. When you buy software, you may have to uncheck a box for "Send me updates..." or whatever. If you don't, you've given permission to send you e-mails. Simpler solutions for stopping e-mails: a) use the Unsubscribe thingy at the bottom of the e-mails; or b) use filters to send the spam to trash. If your e-mail provider has a web-mail portal, go there to set the filters, then the e-mails you don't want won't show up on your computer. Upgrade notices: These notices are not sent to you. They are triggered by "update demons", which start when you start the computer. The update demons not only pop-up the notices you don't like, they also slow down your computer. There are several utilities that include tools for cleaning up the start-up list. I use cCleaner, which also does a nice job of cleaning temporary files, etc. Free, too. HTH, Wolf K. |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
On Sun, 6 May 2012 04:07:42 +0000 (UTC), Sam Hill wrote:
Peter Jason wrote: I have Win7 Sp1 Normally I block Internet access by using the Firewall: Control Panel/Windows Firewall/Advanced Settings/Inbound[orOutbound]/NewRule/Wizard-Program/ This program path etc. My question is: how can I block ALL the programs in a particular folder (*.exe) or, for that matter all the contents of a folder without having to go thru them one-by-one? At the moment, I have to enter them all individually, both for incoming & outgoing; and it's tedious. How often do you actually have multiple EXEs in the same folder? It seems to me that would be a rare occurrence as programs tend to use separate folders and sub-folders all to themselves - which is the prudent way to construct your drive. Please don't say you actually choose to install more than one to a folder... Many programs have more than one exe in the installation directory. Take a look at C:\Program Files\Java\jre7\bin for an obvious example. -- Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch) |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
How do I block whole folders from the Internet?
Wolf K wrote:
Upgrade notices: These notices are not sent to you. They are triggered by "update demons", which start when you start the computer. The update demons not only pop-up the notices you don't like, they also slow down your computer. There are several utilities that include tools for cleaning up the start-up list. I use cCleaner, which also does a nice job of cleaning temporary files, etc. Free, too. HTH, Wolf K. Another way to do that, is with a copy of Autoruns.exe . http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s...rnals/bb963902 Right now, on this computer, I can see two entries that allow Adobe Flash to query the adobe server. And that would also give them a way to put a popup on the screen (using their own code). Autoruns uses tick boxes, so you can enable and disable things, and then re-test. What I can't find right now, is the method that Adobe Reader uses to check for updates, but perhaps that one runs, when I actually run Adobe Reader itself. On my laptop, the AV software helps itself to the LAN connection, and does an update check, practically as soon as the OS is running. But I won't be disabling that. Paul |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|