Re: blocking by website

2014-06-09 Thread Lee
On 6/8/14, EE nu...@bees.wax wrote:
 Trane Francks wrote:
 On 6/7/14 7:19 AM +0900, stan wrote:
 I have two computers connected to web via same IP ISP. One got blocked
 so I cant load to certain website. The other did not. They both us
 SM2.26 and cookies are disabled.

 I have checked all environmental variables and they appear same.

 Is there anything new lately which identifies certain PC via the
 browser, some hidden info which can be monitored by the website into
 which you want to load?

 Cookies, ID used to login to site, trust settings for certificates ...
 all can either identify a particular PC or get in the way of accessing a
 site. That said, the most typical issue that causes a site to magically
 become blocked is malware on the system.

 There are also DOM Storage, ETags, user-agents.

and someone already mentioned blocking done by the home router.

You could try running wireshark and see what traffic is sent/received.
If you don't get anything at all back to the blocked computer it's
probably the home router/wireless AP/etc. doing the blocking[1].  If
the blocked computer is able to establish a connection to the server
(send a tcp packet with the syn flag, receive one with the syn+ack
flags, send an ack) then you can look inside the packets and see what
data is getting the one computer blocked  not the other.

Regards,
Lee


[1] did you check that the blocked computer can get to other web
sites?  after clearing the cache?
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Re: blocking by website

2014-06-08 Thread EE

Trane Francks wrote:

On 6/7/14 7:19 AM +0900, stan wrote:

I have two computers connected to web via same IP ISP. One got blocked
so I cant load to certain website. The other did not. They both us
SM2.26 and cookies are disabled.

I have checked all environmental variables and they appear same.

Is there anything new lately which identifies certain PC via the
browser, some hidden info which can be monitored by the website into
which you want to load?


Cookies, ID used to login to site, trust settings for certificates ...
all can either identify a particular PC or get in the way of accessing a
site. That said, the most typical issue that causes a site to magically
become blocked is malware on the system.


There are also DOM Storage, ETags, user-agents.

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Re: blocking by website

2014-06-07 Thread Geoff Welsh

Trane Francks wrote:

On 6/7/14 7:19 AM +0900, stan wrote:

I have two computers connected to web via same IP ISP. One got blocked
so I cant load to certain website. The other did not. They both us
SM2.26 and cookies are disabled.

I have checked all environmental variables and they appear same.

Is there anything new lately which identifies certain PC via the
browser, some hidden info which can be monitored by the website into
which you want to load?


Cookies, ID used to login to site, trust settings for certificates ...
all can either identify a particular PC or get in the way of accessing a
site. That said, the most typical issue that causes a site to magically
become blocked is malware on the system.


I've had my Linksys router do it numerous times.
GW
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blocking by website

2014-06-06 Thread stan
I have two computers connected to web via same IP ISP. One got blocked 
so I cant load to certain website. The other did not. They both us 
SM2.26 and cookies are disabled.


I have checked all environmental variables and they appear same.

Is there anything new lately which identifies certain PC via the 
browser, some hidden info which can be monitored by the website into 
which you want to load?

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Re: blocking by website

2014-06-06 Thread Trane Francks

On 6/7/14 7:19 AM +0900, stan wrote:

I have two computers connected to web via same IP ISP. One got blocked
so I cant load to certain website. The other did not. They both us
SM2.26 and cookies are disabled.

I have checked all environmental variables and they appear same.

Is there anything new lately which identifies certain PC via the
browser, some hidden info which can be monitored by the website into
which you want to load?

Cookies, ID used to login to site, trust settings for certificates ... 
all can either identify a particular PC or get in the way of accessing a 
site. That said, the most typical issue that causes a site to magically 
become blocked is malware on the system.


--
/
// Trane Francks   tr...@tranefrancks.com   Tokyo, Japan
// Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty.
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Re: blocking by website

2014-06-06 Thread stan

Trane Francks wrote:

On 6/7/14 7:19 AM +0900, stan wrote:

I have two computers connected to web via same IP ISP. One got blocked
so I cant load to certain website. The other did not. They both us
SM2.26 and cookies are disabled.

I have checked all environmental variables and they appear same.

Is there anything new lately which identifies certain PC via the
browser, some hidden info which can be monitored by the website into
which you want to load?

Cookies, ID used to login to site, trust settings for certificates ... 
all can either identify a particular PC or get in the way of accessing 
a site. That said, the most typical issue that causes a site to 
magically become blocked is malware on the system.


It appears it was DNS Cache negative value so the XP command ipconfig 
/flushdns fixed the problem


Strange.

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