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| Re: ISP redirect to their web search page on 404 "Jeff Higgins" <oohiggins******.com> wrote in message news:hbn9jl$m2u$1@news.eternal-september.org... >> If you start up IE in "no add-ons" mode does it still happen? >> > > run -> iexplore extoff -> still goes to SL Typo? You omitted the hyphen necessary to make that viewed and actioned as a switch. Run... iexplore.exe -nohome -extoff Then you may have to click Stop or press Ctrl-t to be able to use the Address bar. Then you will see the running with add-ons disabled warning. --- |
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| Re: ISP redirect to their web search page on 404 When you get to the ISP redirected page (Suggested Web Sites) save the complete URL and do a whois to get its IP address. With both the URL and IP address of the URL, make changes to the Hosts file directing both the URL and IP address to either 127.0.0.1 localhost (your computer so you'll not get any page) or to a page you prefer using its IP. More info on Hosts: http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/how_to_use_hosts.html "Dan" <news@worldofspack.com> wrote in message news:613DCC86-B8E0-4425-8194-221E677A8A83@microsoft.com... > > "Jeff Higgins" <oohiggins******.com> wrote in message > news:hblb6u$qd1$1@news.eternal-september.org... >> Hi, >> >> My ISP (Suddenlink) redirects all 404 (if not others) to their >> 'Suggested web sites" page. They have an opt out preference page >> which will not work. 'Customer service' will only say that I should >> 'opt out' and cannot explain why that option is not working for me. >> Is there a way to stop this from within IE8? >> Thank you >> Jeff > > When you say "404" do you mean sites that don't exist (which is what > VanguardLH's reply is all about), or do you actually mean a real 404 > response from a server (where the site exists, but the page requested > doesn't). > > In the latter case, this would indicate that your ISP is forcing all HTTP > requests via a proxy and is intercepting the HTTP 404 response code to > display the suggested sites. Vanguard's information won't help in this > case - you'll need to find a way to get around that proxy. > > A quick search on Google for Suddenlink and suggested sites brings up a > few posts on various forums from people stating they'd already changed DNS > servers and it makes no difference, which suggests that they are using an > HTTP proxy and intercepting response codes - personally I'd switch ISP, > but if that's not an option then you could look at finding (either free or > subscription based) an SSL proxy somewhere outside of your ISP that you > can make all your browser requests through - the SSL encryption will mean > that your ISP can't intercept any specific response codes because they > won't be able to decrypt the data. > > -- > Dan |
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| Re: ISP redirect to their web search page on 404 If it's a transparent proxy returning the page and not a redirection then this won't do much except require every incorrect host ever visited to be entered which will likely be much more annoying to the user than seeing the suggested sites. Dan "John" <me@no.org> wrote in message news:uRYlYkmVKHA.220@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl... > When you get to the ISP redirected page (Suggested Web Sites) save the > complete URL and do a whois to get its IP address. With both the URL and > IP address of the URL, make changes to the Hosts file directing both the > URL and IP address to either 127.0.0.1 localhost (your computer so you'll > not get any page) or to a page you prefer using its IP. > More info on Hosts: http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/how_to_use_hosts.html > > > "Dan" <news@worldofspack.com> wrote in message > news:613DCC86-B8E0-4425-8194-221E677A8A83@microsoft.com... >> >> "Jeff Higgins" <oohiggins******.com> wrote in message >> news:hblb6u$qd1$1@news.eternal-september.org... >>> Hi, >>> >>> My ISP (Suddenlink) redirects all 404 (if not others) to their >>> 'Suggested web sites" page. They have an opt out preference page >>> which will not work. 'Customer service' will only say that I should >>> 'opt out' and cannot explain why that option is not working for me. >>> Is there a way to stop this from within IE8? >>> Thank you >>> Jeff >> >> When you say "404" do you mean sites that don't exist (which is what >> VanguardLH's reply is all about), or do you actually mean a real 404 >> response from a server (where the site exists, but the page requested >> doesn't). >> >> In the latter case, this would indicate that your ISP is forcing all HTTP >> requests via a proxy and is intercepting the HTTP 404 response code to >> display the suggested sites. Vanguard's information won't help in this >> case - you'll need to find a way to get around that proxy. >> >> A quick search on Google for Suddenlink and suggested sites brings up a >> few posts on various forums from people stating they'd already changed >> DNS servers and it makes no difference, which suggests that they are >> using an HTTP proxy and intercepting response codes - personally I'd >> switch ISP, but if that's not an option then you could look at finding >> (either free or subscription based) an SSL proxy somewhere outside of >> your ISP that you can make all your browser requests through - the SSL >> encryption will mean that your ISP can't intercept any specific response >> codes because they won't be able to decrypt the data. >> >> -- >> Dan > |
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| PAGE PRINTSCREEN would u please provide the printscreen & some more details of the same, reason i m asking for the information coz most of the isp's provide relevant information to their customers..... Thanks Sid Jeff Higgins wrote: ISP redirect to their web search page on 404 20-Oct-09 Hi, My ISP (Suddenlink) redirects all 404 (if not others) to their 'Suggested web sites" page. They have an opt out preference page which will not work. 'Customer service' will only say that I should 'opt out' and cannot explain why that option is not working for me. Is there a way to stop this from within IE8? Thank you Jeff Previous Posts In This Thread: On Tuesday, October 20, 2009 5:47 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: ISP redirect to their web search page on 404 Hi, My ISP (Suddenlink) redirects all 404 (if not others) to their 'Suggested web sites" page. They have an opt out preference page which will not work. 'Customer service' will only say that I should 'opt out' and cannot explain why that option is not working for me. Is there a way to stop this from within IE8? Thank you Jeff On Tuesday, October 20, 2009 6:56 PM VanguardLH wrote: Jeff Higgins wrote:If you use your ISP's DNS server, and if their DNS server Jeff Higgins wrote: If you use your ISP's DNS server, and if their DNS server is configured to never fail on a lookup but instead redirect to their "suggested sites" page then you are screwed. Comcast did the same thing but they provided an opt-out process (which usually took under 4 hours to complete). Verisign tried the same fiasco many years ago with their stranglehold over the .com top-level domains (but there were so many complaints that they quit, threatened to return, but never did). It appears your ISP intends to let their customers opt-out of the redirect page for DNS lookup failures. How long have you waited for it to get updated for your account? Did you change your cable modem after opting out? Have you asked for someone higher up than the first-level script-reading near-boob tech that answers when you call your ISP's tech support line? You'll need to push to get your ticket escalated beyond the idiot that first answers their support calls. OpenDNS is an alternate DNS service you could use. Configure your TCP/IP settings to use it instead of your ISP's (i.e., switch from dynamically assigning your ISP's DNS server to specifying to use OpenDNS' DNS server). However, OpenDNS also has their redirect service for DNS lookups that would otherwise fail. You must open an account with OpenDNS, keep your current WAN-side IP address updated in your account (which requires you install an IP updater client on your host), and disable their redirect service (Typo Correction). They need to know your current IP address so they know what account's settings to apply when they get a connection to their DNS server. Alas, when you disable their redirect service, they disable many features in a free account (i.e., they really want to generate revenue from that Google search on their redirect page). If you use OpenDNS without an account, you get stuck with their DNS redirection. If you use OpenDNS with an account (and an IP updater client to keep your current dynamic IP address recorded in your OpenDNS account), you can disable the Typo Correction feature but will lose lots of other features of having an account (if you even care about them). There are probably other public DNS services (some free) that you could use that might not implement a DNS redirection "service". Happy hunting. http://www.google.com/search?q=%2Bdns+lookup+%2Bfree On Tuesday, October 20, 2009 8:00 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: VanguardLH wrote:Hey buddy, can you spare a dime? VanguardLH wrote: Hey buddy, can you spare a dime? Tip jars. Virtual panhandlers. Shrug. it is been several days since I declined the 'help'. I reckon I will attempt to escalate ... Another day, another ****ed ... Grateful thanks for the lucid discussion on alternative DNS servers, I have some reading to do. Appreciative Jeff Higgins On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 6:39 AM Dan wrote: When you say "404" do you mean sites that do not exist (which is When you say "404" do you mean sites that do not exist (which is what VanguardLH's reply is all about), or do you actually mean a real 404 response from a server (where the site exists, but the page requested does not). In the latter case, this would indicate that your ISP is forcing all HTTP requests via a proxy and is intercepting the HTTP 404 response code to display the suggested sites. Vanguard's information will not help in this case - you will need to find a way to get around that proxy. A quick search on Google for Suddenlink and suggested sites brings up a few posts on various forums from people stating they'd already changed DNS servers and it makes no difference, which suggests that they are using an HTTP proxy and intercepting response codes - personally I'd switch ISP, but if that is not an option then you could look at finding (either free or subscription based) an SSL proxy somewhere outside of your ISP that you can make all your browser requests through - the SSL encryption will mean that your ISP cannot intercept any specific response codes because they will not be able to decrypt the data. -- Dan On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:15 AM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:Well..The prompt for this post was:<http://www.qanyon. Dan wrote: Well.. The prompt for this post was: <http://www.qanyon.com/TechZone/TechZoneTranscoder>. If I type this into the address bar or attempt to follow a link to this address I get Suddenlink 'suggested sites'. If I type <http://www.qanyon.com/TechZone/> I go to someone offering to sell the site. If I type <http://bzz> I get res://ieframe.dll/dnserror.htm#http://bzz/> If I type <http://bzz.com/> I go to <http://www.bzzagent.com/> ??? :) (chuckles) where in the world did that come from? So I guess my knowledge of the HTTP is lacking. I enjoy learning and studying, I really do. But this whole subject is not one that I would have picked to engage. Anyway.. Well, some more reading. Switching ISPs is certainly an option, but one that would require some careful thought. (an alternative may present the same problem) In the grand scheme this is a very minor annoyance, but cumlative. I am very grateful for the additional information. I will do the follow-up reading, begin hammering on 'Customer Service', etc. I am hopeful I can make it stop, now armed with a clearer idea of the situation, Thanks. Appreciative Jeff Higgins On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:30 AM Tom Willett wrote: It happens in any browser, not just IE. It happens in any browser, not just IE. it is something your ISP or the web site owners or someone else has done, perhaps on a dns record level. There is nothing *you* can do about it, unless you can figure out the opt out. it is not a browser issue. On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:31 AM Dan wrote: I get an advert for someone selling the domain and a prompt to install I get an advert for someone selling the domain and a prompt to install the Office Data Provider for WBEM, which is odd. Looking at the HTTP traffic in Fiddler2 I can see that it is a 404 response, with the HTML content set to the advert for the domain. I get the same, same as above. This is normal for a non-existent domain Sounds like it redirects, pretty normal. Given what I can see for those URLs above I would suspect that your ISP is indeed proxying all connections and injecting it is suggested sites page when there is a 404 HTTP response code. Changing your DNS will not make any difference, you need to get this disabled by your ISP or, as I suggested before, find a secured proxy you can use so they cannot intercept responses. -- Dan On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:35 AM Dan wrote: Sorry, one other thing came to mind - the possibility that your browser Sorry, one other thing came to mind - the possibility that your browser is hosting a plugin from your ISP that is handling this, in which case there is something you can do about it. If you start up IE in "no add-ons" mode does it still happen? -- Dan On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 11:10 AM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:Thanks for the follow-up Dan.I will attempt another go with SL. Dan wrote: Thanks for the follow-up Dan. I will attempt another go with SL. Hopefully I have neglected to follow precisely a procedure or what-not, and this will have become a non-issue. If it comes to it, I may transcribe some of this discussion. Either way I will post back with the outcome. I appreciate your time, Thanks. JH On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 11:33 AM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:run -> iexplore ?extoff -> still goes to SL Dan wrote: run -> iexplore ?extoff -> still goes to SL On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 12:01 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:Just out of curiosity: Do you suspect there might TOS conflict Dan wrote: Just out of curiosity: Do you suspect there might TOS conflict issues with the above mentioned alternative DNS server, alternative secured proxy, etc? I will try to find SL's TOS page. Geez. :-) On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 12:56 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: VanguardLH wrote:Virtual panhandler with sanctioned muscle.Ah. VanguardLH wrote: Virtual panhandler with sanctioned muscle. Ah. I think I am getting it. <http://bzz> IE considers malformed and refuses to even post a request. bzz = first random noise to come to my mind. I just wish that IE would just say "Malformed URL" or "Status: 404 Not Found" or some such, instead of the truly uninformative <res://ieframe.dll/dnserror.htm#http://bzz/>. Thanks, JH On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 1:24 PM VanguardLH wrote: Jeff Higgins wrote:IE8 is even worse and just pukes out a "help" page but Jeff Higgins wrote: IE8 is even worse and just pukes out a "help" page but never divulges the error code that it got. On Thursday, October 22, 2009 4:28 AM Dan wrote: 404 is a response code that a server returns when the requested URL is 404 is a response code that a server returns when the requested URL is not present (or in the case of some server security configurations, if the requested resource is disallowed). If IE were to return "Status: 404 Not Found" for a non-existent hostname then it would get a lot more confusing - that would suggest that the site itself exists but that the page requested does not, but this domain name does not have a site running. There could be lots of reasons why a site name you enter does not respond, so having "Malformed URL" is also unhelpful. It could be that your connection is down, your ISP is blocking requests, a router between you and the server is down, or the site itself is down, or there is a DNS issue which means the lookup for the IP address is failing, your IP address or something in the request from your browser might cause a router/firewall/http server to drop the request, and lots of other reasons. The result IE provides is not great, but it does at least provide a list of possible reasons and things to look at. -- Dan On Thursday, October 22, 2009 10:35 AM Robert Aldwinckle wrote: Typo? Typo? You omitted the hyphen necessary to make that viewed and actioned as a switch. Run... iexplore.exe -nohome -extoff Then you may have to click Stop or press Ctrl-t to be able to use the Address bar. Then you will see the running with add-ons disabled warning. --- On Monday, October 26, 2009 2:21 PM John wrote: When you get to the ISP redirected page (Suggested Web Sites) save thecomplete When you get to the ISP redirected page (Suggested Web Sites) save the complete URL and do a whois to get its IP address. With both the URL and IP address of the URL, make changes to the Hosts file directing both the URL and IP address to either 127.0.0.1 localhost (your computer so you will not get any page) or to a page you prefer using its IP. More info on Hosts: http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/how_to_use_hosts.html On Tuesday, October 27, 2009 6:08 AM Dan wrote: If it is a transparent proxy returning the page and not a redirection thenthis If it is a transparent proxy returning the page and not a redirection then this will not do much except require every incorrect host ever visited to be entered which will likely be much more annoying to the user than seeing the suggested sites. Dan EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice It's the Process, Stupid! http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...ss-stupid.aspx |
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| PAGE PRINTSCREEN would u please provide the printscreen & some more details of the same, reason i m asking for the information coz most of the isp's provide relevant information to their customers same as anyother search engine does...... Thanks Sid Jeff Higgins wrote: ISP redirect to their web search page on 404 20-Oct-09 Hi, My ISP (Suddenlink) redirects all 404 (if not others) to their 'Suggested web sites" page. They have an opt out preference page which will not work. 'Customer service' will only say that I should 'opt out' and cannot explain why that option is not working for me. Is there a way to stop this from within IE8? Thank you Jeff Previous Posts In This Thread: On Tuesday, October 20, 2009 5:47 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: ISP redirect to their web search page on 404 Hi, My ISP (Suddenlink) redirects all 404 (if not others) to their 'Suggested web sites" page. They have an opt out preference page which will not work. 'Customer service' will only say that I should 'opt out' and cannot explain why that option is not working for me. Is there a way to stop this from within IE8? Thank you Jeff On Tuesday, October 20, 2009 6:56 PM VanguardLH wrote: Jeff Higgins wrote:If you use your ISP's DNS server, and if their DNS server Jeff Higgins wrote: If you use your ISP's DNS server, and if their DNS server is configured to never fail on a lookup but instead redirect to their "suggested sites" page then you are screwed. Comcast did the same thing but they provided an opt-out process (which usually took under 4 hours to complete). Verisign tried the same fiasco many years ago with their stranglehold over the .com top-level domains (but there were so many complaints that they quit, threatened to return, but never did). It appears your ISP intends to let their customers opt-out of the redirect page for DNS lookup failures. How long have you waited for it to get updated for your account? Did you change your cable modem after opting out? Have you asked for someone higher up than the first-level script-reading near-boob tech that answers when you call your ISP's tech support line? You'll need to push to get your ticket escalated beyond the idiot that first answers their support calls. OpenDNS is an alternate DNS service you could use. Configure your TCP/IP settings to use it instead of your ISP's (i.e., switch from dynamically assigning your ISP's DNS server to specifying to use OpenDNS' DNS server). However, OpenDNS also has their redirect service for DNS lookups that would otherwise fail. You must open an account with OpenDNS, keep your current WAN-side IP address updated in your account (which requires you install an IP updater client on your host), and disable their redirect service (Typo Correction). They need to know your current IP address so they know what account's settings to apply when they get a connection to their DNS server. Alas, when you disable their redirect service, they disable many features in a free account (i.e., they really want to generate revenue from that Google search on their redirect page). If you use OpenDNS without an account, you get stuck with their DNS redirection. If you use OpenDNS with an account (and an IP updater client to keep your current dynamic IP address recorded in your OpenDNS account), you can disable the Typo Correction feature but will lose lots of other features of having an account (if you even care about them). There are probably other public DNS services (some free) that you could use that might not implement a DNS redirection "service". Happy hunting. http://www.google.com/search?q=%2Bdns+lookup+%2Bfree On Tuesday, October 20, 2009 8:00 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: VanguardLH wrote:Hey buddy, can you spare a dime? VanguardLH wrote: Hey buddy, can you spare a dime? Tip jars. Virtual panhandlers. Shrug. it is been several days since I declined the 'help'. I reckon I will attempt to escalate ... Another day, another ****ed ... Grateful thanks for the lucid discussion on alternative DNS servers, I have some reading to do. Appreciative Jeff Higgins On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 6:39 AM Dan wrote: When you say "404" do you mean sites that do not exist (which is When you say "404" do you mean sites that do not exist (which is what VanguardLH's reply is all about), or do you actually mean a real 404 response from a server (where the site exists, but the page requested does not). In the latter case, this would indicate that your ISP is forcing all HTTP requests via a proxy and is intercepting the HTTP 404 response code to display the suggested sites. Vanguard's information will not help in this case - you will need to find a way to get around that proxy. A quick search on Google for Suddenlink and suggested sites brings up a few posts on various forums from people stating they'd already changed DNS servers and it makes no difference, which suggests that they are using an HTTP proxy and intercepting response codes - personally I'd switch ISP, but if that is not an option then you could look at finding (either free or subscription based) an SSL proxy somewhere outside of your ISP that you can make all your browser requests through - the SSL encryption will mean that your ISP cannot intercept any specific response codes because they will not be able to decrypt the data. -- Dan On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:15 AM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:Well..The prompt for this post was:<http://www.qanyon. Dan wrote: Well.. The prompt for this post was: <http://www.qanyon.com/TechZone/TechZoneTranscoder>. If I type this into the address bar or attempt to follow a link to this address I get Suddenlink 'suggested sites'. If I type <http://www.qanyon.com/TechZone/> I go to someone offering to sell the site. If I type <http://bzz> I get res://ieframe.dll/dnserror.htm#http://bzz/> If I type <http://bzz.com/> I go to <http://www.bzzagent.com/> ??? :) (chuckles) where in the world did that come from? So I guess my knowledge of the HTTP is lacking. I enjoy learning and studying, I really do. But this whole subject is not one that I would have picked to engage. Anyway.. Well, some more reading. Switching ISPs is certainly an option, but one that would require some careful thought. (an alternative may present the same problem) In the grand scheme this is a very minor annoyance, but cumlative. I am very grateful for the additional information. I will do the follow-up reading, begin hammering on 'Customer Service', etc. I am hopeful I can make it stop, now armed with a clearer idea of the situation, Thanks. Appreciative Jeff Higgins On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:30 AM Tom Willett wrote: It happens in any browser, not just IE. It happens in any browser, not just IE. it is something your ISP or the web site owners or someone else has done, perhaps on a dns record level. There is nothing *you* can do about it, unless you can figure out the opt out. it is not a browser issue. On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:31 AM Dan wrote: I get an advert for someone selling the domain and a prompt to install I get an advert for someone selling the domain and a prompt to install the Office Data Provider for WBEM, which is odd. Looking at the HTTP traffic in Fiddler2 I can see that it is a 404 response, with the HTML content set to the advert for the domain. I get the same, same as above. This is normal for a non-existent domain Sounds like it redirects, pretty normal. Given what I can see for those URLs above I would suspect that your ISP is indeed proxying all connections and injecting it is suggested sites page when there is a 404 HTTP response code. Changing your DNS will not make any difference, you need to get this disabled by your ISP or, as I suggested before, find a secured proxy you can use so they cannot intercept responses. -- Dan On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 10:35 AM Dan wrote: Sorry, one other thing came to mind - the possibility that your browser Sorry, one other thing came to mind - the possibility that your browser is hosting a plugin from your ISP that is handling this, in which case there is something you can do about it. If you start up IE in "no add-ons" mode does it still happen? -- Dan On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 11:10 AM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:Thanks for the follow-up Dan.I will attempt another go with SL. Dan wrote: Thanks for the follow-up Dan. I will attempt another go with SL. Hopefully I have neglected to follow precisely a procedure or what-not, and this will have become a non-issue. If it comes to it, I may transcribe some of this discussion. Either way I will post back with the outcome. I appreciate your time, Thanks. JH On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 11:33 AM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:run -> iexplore ?extoff -> still goes to SL Dan wrote: run -> iexplore ?extoff -> still goes to SL On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 12:01 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: Dan wrote:Just out of curiosity: Do you suspect there might TOS conflict Dan wrote: Just out of curiosity: Do you suspect there might TOS conflict issues with the above mentioned alternative DNS server, alternative secured proxy, etc? I will try to find SL's TOS page. Geez. :-) On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 12:56 PM Jeff Higgins wrote: VanguardLH wrote:Virtual panhandler with sanctioned muscle.Ah. VanguardLH wrote: Virtual panhandler with sanctioned muscle. Ah. I think I am getting it. <http://bzz> IE considers malformed and refuses to even post a request. bzz = first random noise to come to my mind. I just wish that IE would just say "Malformed URL" or "Status: 404 Not Found" or some such, instead of the truly uninformative <res://ieframe.dll/dnserror.htm#http://bzz/>. Thanks, JH On Wednesday, October 21, 2009 1:24 PM VanguardLH wrote: Jeff Higgins wrote:IE8 is even worse and just pukes out a "help" page but Jeff Higgins wrote: IE8 is even worse and just pukes out a "help" page but never divulges the error code that it got. On Thursday, October 22, 2009 4:28 AM Dan wrote: 404 is a response code that a server returns when the requested URL is 404 is a response code that a server returns when the requested URL is not present (or in the case of some server security configurations, if the requested resource is disallowed). If IE were to return "Status: 404 Not Found" for a non-existent hostname then it would get a lot more confusing - that would suggest that the site itself exists but that the page requested does not, but this domain name does not have a site running. There could be lots of reasons why a site name you enter does not respond, so having "Malformed URL" is also unhelpful. It could be that your connection is down, your ISP is blocking requests, a router between you and the server is down, or the site itself is down, or there is a DNS issue which means the lookup for the IP address is failing, your IP address or something in the request from your browser might cause a router/firewall/http server to drop the request, and lots of other reasons. The result IE provides is not great, but it does at least provide a list of possible reasons and things to look at. -- Dan On Thursday, October 22, 2009 10:35 AM Robert Aldwinckle wrote: Typo? Typo? You omitted the hyphen necessary to make that viewed and actioned as a switch. Run... iexplore.exe -nohome -extoff Then you may have to click Stop or press Ctrl-t to be able to use the Address bar. Then you will see the running with add-ons disabled warning. --- On Monday, October 26, 2009 2:21 PM John wrote: When you get to the ISP redirected page (Suggested Web Sites) save thecomplete When you get to the ISP redirected page (Suggested Web Sites) save the complete URL and do a whois to get its IP address. With both the URL and IP address of the URL, make changes to the Hosts file directing both the URL and IP address to either 127.0.0.1 localhost (your computer so you will not get any page) or to a page you prefer using its IP. More info on Hosts: http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/how_to_use_hosts.html On Tuesday, October 27, 2009 6:08 AM Dan wrote: If it is a transparent proxy returning the page and not a redirection thenthis If it is a transparent proxy returning the page and not a redirection then this will not do much except require every incorrect host ever visited to be entered which will likely be much more annoying to the user than seeing the suggested sites. Dan On Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:20 AM siddhesh dhumal wrote: PAGE PRINTSCREEN would u please provide the printscreen & some more details of the same, reason i m asking for the information coz most of the isp's provide relevant information to their customers..... Thanks Sid EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice Beer - Words To Live By http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...o-live-by.aspx |
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