Originally posted by Sam
View Post
Welp, I'd say that probably does it for me; Comcast has been giving a lovely "bot network" false positive with a helpful number to call from a HTTP-injection Javascript file supposedly located somewhere on Comcast's domain. Of course, no one at the official Comcast support network knows about the number or understands what's going on but it's currently blocking me from using insecure HTTP sites (like TWeb).
And since I can hotspot on mobile from exactly one place in the house and this isn't really shaping up to be a useful experience, I will have to say goodbye until I can find someone at Comcast I can shake some sense into about injecting Javascript as a "security measure" or I can figure out what's infecting my router.
I may hotspot back in if LPoT cites the studies she's referencing. Always a sucker for those things.
Good health to all,
--Sam
And since I can hotspot on mobile from exactly one place in the house and this isn't really shaping up to be a useful experience, I will have to say goodbye until I can find someone at Comcast I can shake some sense into about injecting Javascript as a "security measure" or I can figure out what's infecting my router.
I may hotspot back in if LPoT cites the studies she's referencing. Always a sucker for those things.
Good health to all,
--Sam
Comment