For some reason, when I add my website to a Myspace link, it says it won't go to it due to spamming and phishing coming from the webhost...
Is there any way around this? I want people to be able to go to the site straight from my Myspace.
For some reason, when I add my website to a Myspace link, it says it won't go to it due to spamming and phishing coming from the webhost...
Is there any way around this? I want people to be able to go to the site straight from my Myspace.
You'd probably have to contact myspace tech support. You can try using http://tinyurl.com and see if that helps.
gjr.gr - coming soon: secrets of OCD coding from a self taught tinkerer
Since you are on a shared Free hosting there may be many users abusing the service making Myspace to blacklist our server ip. The best way to get rid of it is go for opting a paid hosting or buy one custom ip address instead of current shared ip.
As an immediate solution you may try posting short url ( or use any other free domain forwarding service ) instead of posting direct link to your site at Myspace. Sorry but am not well sure about if it works or not.
regards
~subeesh
And please remember to post back here, to let others know the best solution you find that works.
Last edited by zen-r; 06-04-2009 at 10:59 AM.
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My site was blocked from my school's computers because pcriot.com is a proxy service. All I had to do was get a co.cc domain, and it works fine.
I recall something similar to this happening with Facebook as well. They wouldn't approve my http://adamparkzer.x10hosting.com URL, but http://adamparkzer.co.nr was fine.
Has anyone tried the tiny url solution yet?
If you use Firefox, try this
1: Open up about:config
2: Go through prompt if you didn't disable it
3: find the value network.http.sendReferrerHeader
4: Change the Integer from 1 to 0
5: Restart Firefox
6: ???
Yes this may mess up some websites who designed their sites in an odd way (such as those who use a URL based Authentication string, and then refers to the referring string for the actual authentication) but if it works fine, then great!
Last edited by Smith6612; 06-05-2009 at 02:01 PM.
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But how does that solve the problem of other people's browsers?
See, the way I take it, MySpace is reading the referring information from the user's browser, such as from what site linked to MySpace and then checking it against the server IP. The way I take it, since x10Hosting can be prone to spam related content based on what x10 provides (free hosting), MySpace blacklisted it due to someone's possible stupidity either on x10Hosting, or from someone who formerly owned/was on the server's IP in the past. What blocking the referring agent would do is, it'll make that show up as nothing, so it'll look more like the visitor is visiting a page from their bookmarks or from their history rather than a site, thus masking the supposably spam site/server/IP in question.
As per other browsers, say hello to a proxy that masks such info unless there's a way to filter out the referring agent (or you'd like to copy the link, go to Google and then paste the site). If this error is showing up through a proxy itself, then that's another story. Otherwise, my best suggestion is to temporarilly disable referring agents to see if it lets you onto Myspace, and if it does, use it until the MySpace staff can go into their blacklist and remove the entry.
EDIT: I re-read the thread again, and I stand with the fact that it's best to contact MySpace about this. Referring agent isn't needed, but it's great for the security.
Last edited by Smith6612; 06-05-2009 at 02:21 PM.
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