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Nope. And I use Safari, which doesn't work like that.Is it typed in your search window? Ctrl + F
Seen it. Safari on an iPad.
Eta: I just made it happen by posting this. The “it” in the sentence above shows up hyperlinked on my device, and I did nuffink to make that happen. In a second, I’ll see whether the quotation marks in this edit made any difference.
Eta: the quotation-marked “it” is not hyperlinked. The first still is.
The image I posted above shows the word followed by period: it. When I've used quotes "it" doesn't get highlighted. Capitalized It gets ignored.Safari on iPhone running iOS 11.2.5 and can see the issue here. The link goes to http://it/. Only happens if the word is surrounded by whitespace, quotes and periods prevent it from occurring.
And that's why NES now uses HTTPS for all connections -- though encryption won't necessarily stop your mobile ISP from messing with content directly viewed on a phone, nor skimwords or locally-installed adware.HTML injection ads by your ISP?
Yes, they do this.
Scanning the thread, seems like it is only being seen in Safari?Nope. And I use Safari, which doesn't work like that.
Happening in Chrome on my iPhone, too. HTML attached, highlighting obviously added by me.
View attachment 222191
That's what I needed. Thank you!
I'll get a ticket in to the culprits and see what's going on.
And that's why NES now uses HTTPS for all connections -- though encryption won't necessarily stop your mobile ISP from messing with content directly viewed on a phone, nor skimwords or locally-installed adware.
Read the title about highlighting 'it' and was expecting a poll:
-Bike pants + roll of quarters?
-Old school short gym shorts and a rolled up sock?
-Khakis two sizes too small?
Hey, some guys need help...
Modern corporate web censorware can determine the requested website name from the initial HTTPS(TLS) handshake and block websites without looking into the content. Not all employers have it turned on, but they are one checkbox away from blocking even encrypted websites.Which has the added benefit to let those whose employers aren’t sniffing HTTPS (yet) from blocking the traffics based on content...NES now uses HTTPS for all connections...
Modern corporate web censorware can determine the requested website name from the initial HTTPS(TLS) handshake and block websites without looking into the content. Not all employers have it turned on, but they are one checkbox away from blocking even encrypted websites.
I'm more annoyed when hotels and businesses offer "free" guest WiFi and then turn on URL filtering using the vendor's default deny list.