

… SpongeBob?
… SpongeBob?
Them: “I don’t care about your religion”
You: “Omg you’re gonna look sooooo stupid.”
There are likely two things going on.
One is a hard block for phishing, ones you will never see, never be alerted of, and never be told about unless you go digging for a missing email you know should have come through.
The other is a soft block for spam. You will likely get an email about the spam being quarantined with the option to release the spam into your inbox.
If the phishing emails were shown as quarantined, you’d end up with hundreds of quarantined emails a day for anyone with a public facing name. Our CFO for instance gets the most out of anyone in the company, numbering in the thousands.
All way the home
You’d be hard pressed to find this kind of screen that isnt a web page. It’s much, much more convenient. You don’t need to deploy an application across the entire company, you just throw a tiny script on all machines that simply pull up the applicable web page. All updates happen in one centralized location, and the pages automatically update.
That is an objectively untrue statement.
While that can indeed be considered an issue, the idea that this somehow makes the internet objectively worse is debatable.
O.o Do you understand what Cloudflare actually does?
I don’t think you’re playing at it, to be clear. You literally fabricated a SpongeBob reference so you could win an argument we weren’t even having.
Good job.