User guide
Allowing Certain Sites to Bypass WebBlocker
User Guide 89
Sexual Acts
Pictures or text exposing anyone or anything involved in explicit
sexual acts and/or lewd and lascivious behavior. Topic includes
masturbation, copulation, pedophilia, as well as intimacy
involving nude or partially nude people in heterosexual, bisexual,
lesbian, or homosexual encounters. It also includes phone sex
advertisements, dating services, adult personals, and sites
devoted to selling pornographic CD-ROMs and videos.
Full Nudity
Pictures exposing any or all portions of human genitalia. Topic
does
not
include sites categorized as Partial/Artistic Nudity
containing partial nudity of a wholesome nature. For example, it
does not include Web sites for publications such as
National
Geographic
or
Smithsonian
magazine nor sites hosted by
museums such as the Guggenheim, the Louvre, or the Museum
of Modern Art.
Partial/artistic Nudity
Pictures exposing the female breast or full exposure of either
male or female buttocks except when exposing genitalia which is
handled under the Full Nudity category. Topic does not include
swimsuits, including thongs.
For information on checking specific sites against the SurfControl
database, and for more information on WebBlocker categories, see
the following FAQs on the WatchGuard Support site at:
https://www.watchguard.com/support/AdvancedFaqs/web_main.asp
- How can I see a list of blocked sites?
- How do different sites map into WebBlocker’s 14 categories?
Allowing Certain Sites to Bypass WebBlocker
Because some sites might be useful to users despite their being
denied by WebBlocker, you can specify sites that you want to be
allowed regardless of other WebBlocker settings.
For example, employees in your company might have need to access
Web sites that contain medical information. Some of these sites
might be forbidden by WebBlocker because they could fall into the
category of sex education. You can override the WebBlocker setting
by adding the site to the Allowed Sites list.