vancouver.cs.washington.edu — Last month we learned that some ISPs are inserting ads into web pages requested by their end users. Have you wondered how often this is happening, and whether it's happened to you? This web site is designed by the University of Washington and ICSI to answer these questions. Visit it to see if your ISP is modifying your web pages in flight!
Jul 24, 2007 View in Crawl 4
chuck3330Jul 25, 2007
i want to become tech-savvy but i don't know where to start....what's Linux?not sarcastic humor BTW...my SN is charles3330 if u are willing to enlighten me
noamsmlJul 25, 2007
WTF are future versions of the web, and how will they ban adblocking?
imyselfandmeJul 27, 2007
It's interesting and ironic that it arguably misfires when you are running anti-advertising proxies such as privoxy.{^_-}
dron55Aug 9, 2007
Comcast (US - Maryland)No modifications
pawas01Sep 4, 2007
I have seen many ISPs in UK that modify pages.<a class="user" href="http://www.columbiashoes.us">http://www.columbiashoes.us</a>
shamundaOct 24, 2007
Will this tool also let me know what's injected or modified - from say - a corporate firewall?
skinfitzMar 3, 2008
Yes I know I'm replying to a comment from 2007, but you might want to look at this:<a class="user" href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/29/phorm_documents/">http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/29/phorm_docu ...</a>
darkdxApr 16, 2008
Hi. Nobody will read this comment evar!
pasthelodApr 17, 2008
Throw out ZA, use Outpost or something. But buy a router and close all incoming ports except the ones you actually NEED. Patch XP regulary and use a virus scanner (like AVG Free).
kentw007Apr 30, 2008
essential tool