Ah, not a cross domain issue. It's an SSL error: it appears that your
iframe is referenced as batteryreplacement.brighthouse.com but the
server identifies itself as mybrighthouse.msoservices.com

On Mar 20, 8:32 pm, Dhana <sldh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> An edit to the comment above, I am not trying to access or share data
> between the parent window and the iframe contained in it. (instead of
> "two iframes")
>
> On Mar 20, 8:30 pm, Dhana <sldh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Ok,  but the thing is, I am not accessing any content per se.  I am
> > simply displaying the iframe in the main parent window without trying
> > to share data across those two iframes.  Would that still be affected?
>
> > On Mar 20, 8:28 pm, mkmanning <michaell...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > You can't access the content of an iframe when it's in a different
> > > domain (different domain == subdomain).
>
> > > On Mar 20, 7:58 pm, Dhana <sldh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > I know this message is not supposed to be here since it's not a jquery
> > > > issue, but I really need some in depth help on this.
>
> > > > I have an iframe in a domain here  
> > > > http://www.brighthouse.com/products/home_phone/IND/battery.aspx.
>
> > > > The iframe basically contains the shopping section of the site.  The
> > > > iframe path 
> > > > ishttps://batteryreplacement.brighthouse.com/shop/index.aspx.
> > > > As you can see, the iframe is a subdomain of the main domain.  But I
> > > > keep getting an "Acess is denied" for jquery.min.js which is
> > > > referenced in the subdomain.  Does anyone know why this could be
> > > > happening?  When I see the iframe content by itself, there are no
> > > > issues of course.
>
> > > > This only happens in IE, not Firefox.  Why would the parent window say
> > > > "access denied" for a content in an iframe, especially one that is in
> > > > a subdomain.

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