Ahh. You are stuck doing the managers job. It is not easy with a router. Your access-lists are being done properly. You are just fighting a losing battle that is not yours. Put the monkey on the managers back, and give them supporting data--capture the packets via sniffers and firewall programs.
Best of luck.
bob
I just pulled this off the ISP Business website.
"If you block incoming ports above 1024, you will likely block a whole lot more than just ICQ. There is no effective way of blocking instant messenger services without a stateful packet inspection firewall. Blocking ports will not solve your problem, as there are ICQ servers out there that accept connections on any port."
"This isn't a technology problem, it's an administrative one. If people aren't allowed to use these services, enforcement via logs might be a better option. After a few folks are busted, others will simply stop."
[BL concurred] "You would be better advised to treat this as a staff policy issue rather than attempting to block it-unless they only want HTTP and mail, in which case it would be easier to simply block everything except the ports which those require. Don't forget, also, that many software packages have anti-firewall features which will allow them to be used on ports under 1024."