Re: Bass Burhglar Alarms



Frank Olson wrote:

>> I never asked for your forgiveness nor did I offer forgiveness to you.
>
> No, but you "waltzed" back in here after thirty days fully expecting
everyone here to "start over" from scratch...

Wrong. I simply logged on and posted. There was neither a waltz nor
an expectation involved. In fact, I pretty much expected you to do
exactly what you did, try to start a fight. Sure enough...

>> Your continual vendetta against me has brought you repeated chastisement from numerous regulars and visitors.

>> I'll post about security alarms and politely answer questions. I suggest you do the same.

> Fine. Let's call this a "contract", shall we??

Call it anything you want.

>> and have everyone here...

>> You don't speak for "everyone here".

> Where did I say I did??

It was implied in your statement.

>> I suggest you let it go permanently. The newsgroup will be better for it.

> Done! I shall adhere to the FAQ.

Good.

>>> As for BBA... I should tell you to enable security alerts on your web browser (if you're using IE).

>> My browsers (IE, Netscape and Firefox) all show my pages without any problems.

>>> You'll notice that every page you try to load comes up with a bogus message that you're cruising a "secure site".

>> Those messages are generated by your browser.

> As well as your customer's browsers...

As soon as one of my customers has the same problem you say you have
I'll deal with it. I average over 800 unique hosts per day on each of
my two main websites. So far you're the only one who says you have a
problem with security.

> if they have the same security settings active. All I'm saying is that you've got code in your header that IE (at the particular settings I employ) picks up.

You are 100% wrong. There is no security code in the headers at all.

> It makes your site a "kludge"...

Well, let's see. My websites are among the most popular in the
security industry. Google rates my site a 5, the same as those of most
of the major manufacturers. I can't keep up with all the sales calls.
Last time I bothered to look, your website was rated 0 by Google.

> If you don't appreciate the "critique", just say so
and I'll keep my mouth shut about that too so you can go on your merry
way... Mind you, your customers (those with higher security settings
in
their browsers) will too...

Nope. I don't appreciate your critique. I'll take the risk that there
may be some customer out there who can't get past the non-existant
code.

Regards,
Robert L Bass
www.BassBurglarAlarms.com

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Firefox????
    ... you can have multiple browsers installed to your OS. ... Internet Explorer Enhanced Security Configuration changes the browsing ... You could consider disabling all Security Settings in IE and use IE only ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: Firefox????
    ... you can have multiple browsers installed to your OS. ... Internet Explorer Enhanced Security Configuration changes the browsing ... You could consider disabling all Security Settings in IE and use IE only ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: Unable to download/run ActiveX controls
    ... Your current security settings prohibit running Active X ... Test Your ActiveX Installation ... change the security settings for this zone? ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser)
  • [TOOL] HTML Manglizer - Automatically Check For HTML Parsing Flaws
    ... Get your security news from a reliable source. ... All browsers but Microsoft Internet Explorer kept crashing on a regular ... basis due to NULL pointer references, memory corruption, buffer overflows, ... A gallery of quick examples I examined to locate the offending tag (total ...
    (Securiteam)
  • Re: Writing a file in Response
    ... As before I got this working we had the client side application being invoked from an URL, but as it was being invoked from a https source it would complain of leaving the secure zone. ... If you try to do this via AJAX, you will have other security rules and MS has rules that overrides the "standard security" - which is ... it makes portable code for different browsers more difficult. ... Some browsers, which is really unfortunately, have began to REMOVE the user options to turn some of this off, like Javascript. ...
    (microsoft.public.dotnet.languages.vb)