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Cox Comm. Injects Code Into Web Traffic To Announce Email Outage

An anonymous reader writes "Cox Communications appears to be injecting JavaScript and HTML into subscribers' traffic, as part of their effort to announce an email service outage. Pictures showing the popup."

6 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Is this News? by Pedrito · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, not like this. At least I've never seen it before. This is intrusive. I've had it show up in my browser at least 3 times in the past couple of hours and it's about a service I don't even use. I don't care if their e-mail is out. I don't use their e-mail. I don't want this stuff and there ought to be a simple way to opt out.

  2. Re:Is this News? by sabri · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, not like this. At least I've never seen it before. This is intrusive. I've had it show up in my browser at least 3 times in the past couple of hours and it's about a service I don't even use. I don't care if their e-mail is out. I don't use their e-mail. I don't want this stuff and there ought to be a simple way to opt out.

    There is, it is called: Vote With Your Money...

    --
    I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
  3. Re:Is this News? by guttentag · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's the modern equivalent of the phone company playing a recorded message while you are talking to someone on the phone. Or the post office opening your mail and gluing a message to the contents, ransom-note-style, about your mail carrier being out sick. It wouldn't happen. But cox wants to condition people to think of the web like cable TV, where thy can cover part of the picture with service announcements. The FCC needs to weigh in on this and stop it.

  4. Raise your hand.. by claar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yep, I received this too, right on Netflix. Um, thanks, Cox, but even if I used your email service, I'd really rather watch my movie..

    Keep your hands off my traffic, please. Is it too much to ask for you to simply carry my bits back and forth for the agreed-upon amount?

    --
    I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous...
  5. Re:Is this News? by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That and they need someone to deliver the last leg on unprofitable routs. More privatized profits and socialized losses.

  6. Bad practice.. by Nezic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So now internet companies are essentially trying to train users to trust whatever information shows up on a web page that claims to be from 'known' sources?

    After all the problems that spoof emails cause for people who don't know better, you'd think an internet provider *would* know better.