IE7 Blocking Google Image Search?
An anonymous reader writes, "I just tried a Google Image Search in IE7 for the first time. Whenever I click on an image, my browser tells me in big bold letters, "This is a reported phishing website." Try it yourself: make sure automatic phishing detection is turned on and do an (adorable) image search; click on one of the result thumbnails. MSN Live Image Search has no such issues. Insert Microsoft evil conspiracy theory here." I get this behavior under IE7, Win XP Pro, SP2, Parallels, Mac OS X.
Nothing to see here move on...
I just tried it. Works fine.
Seems to work well (properly) for me
Vista RC1 and XP Pro SP2. Not able to duplicate. Methinks PEBKAC.
If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb
OMG KITTENS!!!!!
So, basically any page with frames containing other pages is evil now? Thank you, MS.
:wq
explained by incompetence.
Its obviously not in their interest to incorrectly block google images. All it will do is make people not trust the phishing stuff, and turn it off. Incomptent maybe, but they aren't stupid enough to think that people would just stop using google images when they get blocked and use msn instead.
Guys, can't you see it, this article is a cunning plot by the Evil Empire to produce 3,000 /. posts saying "IE7 is fine"? How devious can you get? Stick to Firefox, and then you'll never get suckered like this!
Virtually serving coffee
Perhaps MS is afraid of all felines.
Lynx,
Cheetahs,
Pumas,
Jaguars,
Panthers,
Tigers,
Leopards
-tgpo
That's Problem Exists Between Keyboard And Chair for those that haven't see the acronym. I have XP SP2 here and IE7 is in a basically default state since I use FF. Tried GIS and explicitly asked it to check and it reports "this is not a phishing webstie". It says that both for the main GIS page and after I did an actual search.
/. would not post things like this without verification.
Remember folks: FUD, it's not just from MS anymore!
Seriously I wish people would stop with the crap but I really wish
...the URL and query string and hence everything you are Googling for being passed to Microsoft's servers. Think of all those Google searches (and the following immediate clicks) Microsoft could extrapolate and use to improve their own search engine...
A good example when someone who has found anything in IE7 gets a headlight... even without checking. Either due to frames or not replicable by anyone but the author.. still.. OMG... its an IE7 error.. so it's got to be posted! Talk about conspiracy theries
http://www.automatiq.se
... maybe it really WAS a phishing website that he thought was The Google. Maybe, just maybe IE7 actually protected him in his search for adorable pussies.
kittens and puppies are *never* innocent. They're responsible for more than you know... if we drop our guard then they'll enslave the world.