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  Home News Technology Internet Security Thursday, July 10, 2025 
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DNSFilter Data Examines Companies' Evolving Policies on Content Blocking
Saturday, June 14, 2025

Protective DNS firm finds customers are increasingly blocking adult content, gambling sites

WASHINGTON, June 10, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Organizations are increasingly using content filtering not just to thwart security threats, but also to increase workplace productivity and enforce compliance. That's according to new analysis from DNSFilter examining data collected from its DNS content filtering and threat-blocking platform. The findings highlight how web content filtering policies are evolving, as well as which categories organizations block most frequently.

One notable trend is that more companies are currently focused on blocking employees from accessing adult content and illegal torrenting sites on the internet, although corporate policies have evolved over the past year.

Among the findings:

    --  Blocking adult content is one of the most common goals of organization's
        content filtering and blocking policies: An examination of what
        companies are looking to block (outside of security threats) shows that
        adult content is present in over 84% of those policies; the P2P
        (peer-to-peer) and illegal category, which contains things like
        torrenting sites, followed closely behind with inclusion in 81% of
        policies. By contrast, the terrorism and hate category is blocked by
        close to 66% of companies, with gambling present in 51% of companies'
        content filtering policies.
    --  Policy creators are cracking down on access to "Self-harm" content:
        "Self-harm" sites have become a bigger focus for organizations; in fact,
        this category showed up in 234% more policies in 2025 than in the prior
        year.
    --  Access to terrorism-related content is a growing concern:  While the
        terrorism and hate category is currently only included in about
        two-thirds of companies' blocking policies, that represents more than a
        5% increase compared to last year.
    --  More policies are concerned with dating sites than weapons-related
        sites: Dating and personal sites are blocked by nearly 37% of policies,
        while weapons are included in 35%. This could indicate that dating and
        personal ad sites are seen as a bigger distraction for employees during
        the workday.
    --  Certain categories are decreasing in importance: Search engines appeared
        in almost 19% fewer policies than they did in February 2024, while
        alcohol and tobacco were in 10% fewer polices.  We've also seen that ads
        are becoming a less frequently blocked category, likely because so many
        websites today depend on ads and trackers in order to operate.

These findings underscore the growing importance of adaptive content policies to balance security, compliance and workforce efficiency. Organizations can gain insights into shifting web usage patterns to update filtering policies effectively.

TK Keanini, CTO, DNSFilter, said: "Organizations are getting more nuanced in how they manage access to online content, because they understand that not all of the internet should be accessible to their users. Blocking threats is obvious, but these findings reinforce the idea that web filtering is no longer just a security function; it's becoming a key productivity and compliance tool."

About the company:
DNSFilter is a cybersecurity company that protects every click, leveraging AI-driven content filtering and threat protection to block threats 10 days earlier than competitors. DNSFilter's solution secures workers anywhere they are, helping to boost productivity, minimize compliance risk, and protect corporate brands on public Wi-Fi networks. Unlike traditional filtering solutions, DNSFilter deploys in minutes instead of days and is trusted by more than 43,000 organizations worldwide. Learn more about how DNSFilter is the first and last line of defense for corporate and hybrid networks at dnsfilter.com.

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/dnsfilter-data-examines-companies-evolving-policies-on-content-blocking-302477024.html

SOURCE DNSFilter



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