![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
hm, not sure if I should actually give out the url considering it's contents (but 'technically' legal, due to educational clauses).... hts.io and that's all I'm saying.
No, no. It is entirely possible to find the site from what I've said, and if you aren't willing to find the site then the site itself probably wouldn't interest you too muchDakkanor wrote:Pm it?
aw, you spoiled it lol. Not very hard to find though, and should be easily recognizable to those who've been there.Drury wrote:hts = hack this site
Why not? Not that I want to encourage 'hacking' (the actual term I want to use is cracking but I'm not sure how many people would know the difference), but it's good to know how it (basically) works (especially if you have your own site that you want to protect). Besides, I did create it in 'off topic'.Not sure how long this topic is going to last but I hope not too long.
No nothing like that, though I wouldn't be immensely surprised if one happened to be there somewhere (though from what I read the mods take it down asap). There are better/different sites for that sort of thing (and I wouldn't be sharing them here, that's not what this website is about. Actually I probably wouldn't share that kind at all).Drury wrote:but from your original post it seems you have found some files on the server that we're not supposed to have access to.
The point of almost all of these 'off topic' threads is simply to share other non-Factorio based things that we've run across and found interesting, so that anyone else who might be interested can see it too.Drury wrote:Basically there is no point to this thread
I haven't and, as far as I know, no one else has either...Darthlawsuit wrote:Have you added a tutorial
I've never actually disabled these...usually hitting the context menu key on the keyboard (between right alt and right ctrl) works, and if that doesn't usually shift+F10 does (also I think some browsers, like opera, ignore those scripts anyways). And of course if those (somehow) fail and I'm just wanting a look at the source I can use 'save page as'. But I'm curious so, mind pointing me somewhere that mentions how?Darthlawsuit wrote:disable "no right click"
hm, I don't remember FF doing that (but I do use Palemoon instead and I usually don't stay on the sites)...though there are those sites that don't load the full content, unless you have logged in, so disabling the overlays doesn't really help in those cases (not too common though).Darthlawsuit wrote:Disabling those overlays is really fun, especially with firefox as it seems to remember you disabling a div
Well, technically altering CSS should do the same since you are not altering the files on the server, however, I did find this that says Firefox has a way to override it (and both Chrome and FF have a 'Stylish' plugin that allows it to persist locally (is that an oxymoron? probably lol)), I'm sure you could probably use Greasemonkey or something similar to auto-alter specific pages/domains when you went there now that I think about it...slay_mithos wrote:Well, firefox has firebug for inline html/js/css modification, but it doesn't stay between pages.
I knew a tool to alter CSS for all site, all class, or other things like that, but I can't remember the name.
I used to disable the Javascript from loading, however in firefox now there is an option to "disable an alert" when it appears and it disables it rather easily.FreeER wrote:I haven't and, as far as I know, no one else has either...Darthlawsuit wrote:Have you added a tutorialI've never actually disabled these...usually hitting the context menu key on the keyboard (between right alt and right ctrl) works, and if that doesn't usually shift+F10 does (also I think some browsers, like opera, ignore those scripts anyways). And of course if those (somehow) fail and I'm just wanting a look at the source I can use 'save page as'. But I'm curious so, mind pointing me somewhere that mentions how?Darthlawsuit wrote:disable "no right click"
edit: nvm, found this post, well as you can probably see I really don't know javascript (or much else) very well yet
hm, I don't remember FF doing that (but I do use Palemoon instead and I usually don't stay on the sites)...though there are those sites that don't load the full content, unless you have logged in, so disabling the overlays doesn't really help in those cases (not too common though).Darthlawsuit wrote:Disabling those overlays is really fun, especially with firefox as it seems to remember you disabling a div
hm, I know that option but I'd have expected the nocontext script to still work (it just disallows the alert right?), plus it's easy to make the script be silent (no alert to the user).Darthlawsuit wrote:there is an option to "disable an alert" when it appears and it disables it rather easily.
yeah handy, though the question (especially since it's a recent development) is whether FF/dev tool designers would consider it a feature or bugDarthlawsuit wrote:Wasn't really expecting it but it was a welcome feature.
Not exactly sure how the inner workings work, but it seems to disable the whole script that makes the alert happen.FreeER wrote:hm, I know that option but I'd have expected the nocontext script to still work (it just disallows the alert right?), plus it's easy to make the script be silent (no alert to the user).Darthlawsuit wrote:there is an option to "disable an alert" when it appears and it disables it rather easily.yeah handy, though the question (especially since it's a recent development) is whether FF/dev tool designers would consider it a feature or bugDarthlawsuit wrote:Wasn't really expecting it but it was a welcome feature.
Wow, that seems...like it could cause problems in (relatively) rare circumstancesDarthlawsuit wrote: Not exactly sure how the inner workings work, but it seems to disable the whole script that makes the alert happen.