Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: Olympia5776 on 15 January 2013, 20:14:55
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Was given a link to a site from owner of a similar car to mine re supplier of copies of underbonnet decals. He has purchased from them .
When I attempt to open the site it opens partially but a strip window at the top of the page states "Internet Explorer has modified this page to prevent cross site scripting "
No access can be got to any of the options on the site .
I've never seen this before , does anyone know what causes it and if there is a solution ?
Here is the site , I've not had any problems after attempting to open it but perhaps you should consider before opening.
http://www.pukardesigns.com/
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No probs for me, here's
a screenshot:
(http://i111.photobucket.com/albums/n156/stmo987/Screenshot_2013-01-15-20-59-57_zps59038c5c.png)
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Works fine for me too ???
Did you forget to put a Shilling in the meter? ??? ;)
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Works fine for me using Firefox (& IE9)
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OK here too................. :y :y
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works fine for me to :y
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Works for me too :y
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Thought from the title this was something to do with Gixer and STMO ... :)
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Should be a setting in the security settings for IE that allows, disallows, or prompts this.
Think it's near the area for java script settings off the top of my head.
I would assume the op has it set to disallow and everyone else has it to allow.
Can cause vulnerabilities if left allowed, as it can allow the injection of malicious scripts from one site, in to another site, that is otherwise 'safe'.
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Should be a setting in the security settings for IE that allows, disallows, or prompts this.
Think it's near the area for java script settings off the top of my head.
I would assume the op has it set to disallow and everyone else has it to allow.
Can cause vulnerabilities if left allowed, as it can allow the injection of malicious scripts from one site, in to another site, that is otherwise 'safe'.
It is an IE thing..... >:(
I've Googled it and set and reset the settings in the Security /custom settings section of tools but the site will not open on any of our 4 PC's . Too late and too tired to be arsed ........I've never seen that in all my years on line .
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Cross Site Scripting is a serious problem, and you should not modify browser settings to "get around it".
And your browser should protect your from it.
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By serious problem, I mean its a common way for internet nasties to compromise you.
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By serious problem, I mean its a common way for internet nasties to compromise you.
I appreciate that TB but there must be something amiss with the settings on my 4 x PC's as no one else seems to get the same problems , every person I have mentioned this to has no problem opening up that site .
I cannot understand wy all these PC's don't like that site and as I said I have never had that message pop up on any site I have ever opened..... :-\
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By serious problem, I mean its a common way for internet nasties to compromise you.
I appreciate that TB but there must be something amiss with the settings on my 4 x PC's as no one else seems to get the same problems , every person I have mentioned this to has no problem opening up that site .
I cannot understand wy all these PC's don't like that site and as I said I have never had that message pop up on any site I have ever opened..... :-\
I get the same error on that site. Its normal to get an error on that site. Do NOT modify your settings to make that site work, unless you can personally guarantee the site is not compromised.
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Should add, on this PC, I'm using IE8.
Can't test with FF, as mine is way too old to point at potentially duff sites, and can't be arsed to update. And I wouldn't run Chrome on any PC until Google start to take security seriously.
Quite simply, avoid that site. IE is doing its job properly, and protecting you from severely suspect activity.
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.. and if the site is genuine and not compromised (no way of knowing that, really) give them a wide berth anyway. If they aren't competent enough to build a site properly they don't deserve your business. ::)
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Probably the fact that that site was created with some kind of template generator (www.wix.com) and most of the Javascript is a) hosted at 'static.wix.com' and b) making http calls to said same server programatically.. I didn't look much further than that.