Alright
unbelievable - imagine that there is a more serious problem.
OK - Almost three days from when it expired until the creation of a new one
i hate dns
They finally renewed it (or so they said).
Yep, back up. Next up in 2023, will be the same thing all over again.
Moderators/Leaders, could you lock this? OP’s question has been solved.
We typically just let those topics close themselves. but thanks for considering!
Hi peeps! I’m back from my vacation.
I have monitoring set up which notifies me if one of the important SSL certificates is about to expire. Basically every three months I’ve had to tell them to renew their certificate because the automated renewal doesn’t work.
But I was away now so I wasn’t able to look into this.
Welcome back, Admin! Glad to see you back.
Hahaha
So much anticipation, like when children are waiting for Santa Claus
@admin Next time, make an IF-admin tracker for us so that it looks like this
Welcome back! I hope you enjoyed your vacation.
russian warplane crashed in RU (videos)
Should I do a name reveal here?
- Yes
- No
- Maybe
We know you’re Bill Gates - no need for a last name
Yes, I would love the ability to google you and learn absolutely everything I can
You’d be surprised what you can find out even without knowing it outright.
Another way to find out if a domain is hosted “censored” is to add /aes.js
to the address.
It also passes Cloudflare unless some action is taken.
Also because that script has a big priority, redirection “doesn’t work” either if it is via .htaccess (on origin)
and not directly as a rule on CF.
Does anyone have an idea about an elegant solution without the CF FW rule I’m currently using that blocks access if the request matches the pattern?
The goal should be that this “js” is never displayed (no REQ), and not to leave a trace through some redirection via CF, etc.
I took a quick look at these new betas
but I didn’t get an idea or I’m too tired…
You are trying to completely block assess to aes.js?
Not sure if it’s possible to do without FW, I can’t find another way on first glance, and while messing around in the betas before none allows you to block (stop, whatever) requests.
Yeah, block but so that it is never called (as if nothing had happened)
because redirections to another URL (RW) etc. leave a trace
if I didn’t use all 3 free rules in CF
I think I could take that aes.js into a “black hole” there
So you want the file, if called, to return a 404 to the client?