Thank you for the insight and clarification.

Michael

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 10/10/02 11:31AM >>>
This may or may not be true - the proxy could be completely transparent
to you.  Simply requesting data on port 80 through your provider's
network may automatically reroute your request through a proxy residing
on their network.  This was the case when I was first switched over from
MediaOne to Comcast.  As part of the switch, Comcast implemented a
transparent proxy that caused all kinds of grief.  Eventually I think
they took it offline because of all of the problems it was causing.

So, just because you did not specifically configure your server to use a
proxy doesn't mean you are not using one.

-Jeff

-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Cook [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2002 09:35 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Subject: [sambar] Proxy Problem {05}

Thanks for the check.  It is set up directly (my ISPs proxy is not used
by my serve)

Michael

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 10/09/02 05:45PM >>>
Hi Michael,

When you set up your server that connects to your ISP, did you set it to
use their proxy, or are you trying to get directly to the internet?

If you're set up to use their proxy, don't.

Tuesday, October 08, 2002, 2:24:10 PM, you wrote:

MC> I wonder if the fact that my ISP wants to charge an extra $10 for 
MC> every "client" that "shares" an Internet connection has anything to 
MC> do with creating this problem.  Hmmm.....
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