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reason's I believe are activex and or some scripting. I'm currently using Norton Personal Firewall. When something gets blocked I need to check both programs to find which is doing the blocking, although I believe it's IE. Question: Is it advisable to set all IE security levels to Low and allow NPF do the work?? Any help will be appreciated, James |
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#2 |
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>Hi. After installing to SP2 I find that IE is blocking some web pages. The >reason's I believe are activex and or some scripting. I'm currently using >Norton Personal Firewall. When something gets blocked I need to check both >programs to find which is doing the blocking, although I believe it's IE. >Question: Is it advisable to set all IE security levels to Low and allow NPF >do the work?? > >Any help will be appreciated, >James James, Internet Explorer security levels are zoned. That is, you can designate any networked site to be treated with an appropriate amount of trust, and scripting permitted accordingly. - Local intranet (totally trusted) - Trusted sites (Internet somewhat trusted) - Internet (Internet minimally trusted) - Restricted sites (Internet UNTRUSTED) If there's a website that you can't use successfully because of blocked content (scripting), IMHO you should designate that specific site as Trusted while you analyse the blocking of scripting, on that site, by NPF. And setup Trusted sites security levels appropriately. But I would not set my entire Internet Explorer security level lower. I would not trust NPF for all my protection. Appropriate settings for Internet Explorer security are well described by Eric Howes, a trusted security advisor (check out discussions in alt.computer.security and microsoft.public.security for instance): <https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/ehowes/www/main.htm> "IE-SPYAD". And James, please don't contribute to the spread and success of email address mining viruses. Learn to munge your email address properly, to keep yourself a bit safer when posting to open forums. Protect yourself and the rest of the internet - read this article. http://www.mailmsg.com/SPAM_munging.htm Cheers, Chuck Paranoia comes from experience - and is not necessarily a bad thing. |
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#3 |
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James "Chuck" <none@example.net> wrote in message news:a276k09aauivnq2mcrf0mlcsue3rmo0m55@4ax.com... > On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 10:33:41 -0400, "JamesJ" <*email_address_deleted*> > wrote: > >>Hi. After installing to SP2 I find that IE is blocking some web pages. The >>reason's I believe are activex and or some scripting. I'm currently using >>Norton Personal Firewall. When something gets blocked I need to check both >>programs to find which is doing the blocking, although I believe it's IE. >>Question: Is it advisable to set all IE security levels to Low and allow >>NPF >>do the work?? >> >>Any help will be appreciated, >>James > > James, > > Internet Explorer security levels are zoned. That is, you can designate > any > networked site to be treated with an appropriate amount of trust, and > scripting > permitted accordingly. > - Local intranet (totally trusted) > - Trusted sites (Internet somewhat trusted) > - Internet (Internet minimally trusted) > - Restricted sites (Internet UNTRUSTED) > > If there's a website that you can't use successfully because of blocked > content > (scripting), IMHO you should designate that specific site as Trusted while > you > analyse the blocking of scripting, on that site, by NPF. And setup > Trusted > sites security levels appropriately. > > But I would not set my entire Internet Explorer security level lower. I > would > not trust NPF for all my protection. > > Appropriate settings for Internet Explorer security are well described by > Eric > Howes, a trusted security advisor (check out discussions in > alt.computer.security and microsoft.public.security for instance): > <https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/ehowes/www/main.htm> "IE-SPYAD". > > And James, please don't contribute to the spread and success of email > address > mining viruses. Learn to munge your email address properly, to keep > yourself a > bit safer when posting to open forums. Protect yourself and the rest of > the > internet - read this article. > http://www.mailmsg.com/SPAM_munging.htm > > Cheers, > Chuck > Paranoia comes from experience - and is not necessarily a bad thing. |