 Stojko Premium join:2007-10-20 St John'S, NL | More great enhancements from Bell!
Hasn't the news from Old Blue been so great lately? | |
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 |  |   Thane_Bitter
join:2005-01-20 London, ON
·Bell Sympatico
| Re: More great enhancements from Bell! said by baineschile :The ISPs have potential to do much worse and better to the consumer than this. Please, they already are. Bell uses Hotmail for mail services, Bell implemented caps (then lowered them, and lowered them again), Bell increased its prices, Bell rents you their modem, Bell throttles, Bell dropped newsgroups, blocked port 25, and Bell would rather directly extract the money from your account then send out an itemized bill.
I think only content injection/redirection is the only thing they have not done (though Canadas other dark horse ISP Rogers does).
Fortunately the more technically savvy users have dropped Bells fault DNS servers log ago, mostly because of the inability to resolve addresses (much like the shredded phonebook that is ubiquitous with payphones it is there, but dont expect it will be useful).
In Canada regardless of the ISP you use, it still makes use of either Bell/Telus or Rogers controlled equipment.
What would you choose? Spam, bacon and Spam Or Bacon, Spam, and Spam -- Bell Canada, stifling technical innovation since 1880. | |
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 |  |  |  cornelius785
join:2006-10-26 Worcester, MA
| Re: More great enhancements from Bell! the 'blocking port 25' point is moot. nearly all other carriers do that to residential customers as residential service doesn't permit servers. The renting the modem is partially moot since there are other carriers where you rent the modem, but I've noticed a trend to customer buying the modems. maybe they are behind in the times. | |
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 |  |  |  |   Thane_Bitter
join:2005-01-20 London, ON
·Bell Sympatico
| Re: More great enhancements from Bell! With Bell you don't have the luxury of choosing to rent or buy; it's much like in the early days of the telephone system where you rented your phone if you wanted phone service. Yes, several companies block ports, but at the rate Bell (and other companies are making changes) such companies are less like ISPs and more like AOL (keyword Control ) -- DD-WRT httpd vulnerability! Update Now!!: »www.dd-wrt.com/dd-wrtv3/index.php | |
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  S_engineer
join:2007-05-16 Chicago, IL
·Comcast
| I wonder how Bell provides the clickstream data for the pricing of the adverts. Do they just count the number of 404s? This is a nuisance that can be circumvented pretty easily. But the trend is awful. No rock will be left untouched in search of that elusive penny! -- BF69~~~Please stop suffocating gerbils! | |
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  exseven Premium,VIP join:2003-05-23 Beamsville, ON | Great post, if it was correct I would like to point out that to receive a 404 page one would actually have had a successful DNS lookup, and hence not received the page Karl has pointed out...
Great detective work Karl, thank you for making the interwebs smrter | |
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 |  amartinas
join:2007-11-19 USA | Re: Great post, if it was correct owned. | |
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 Uninvited
join:2008-06-30 Oshawa, ON | Browser hijacking? I first noticed it when I typed "youtube" into firefox's address bar. Previously, it worked like an "I'm feeling lucky button" and if it was a popular term, would take you to the website. No longer. | |
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 zalternate
join:2007-02-22 BC
·TELUS
| Controversial = Illegal Controversial = Illegal.
Getting real tired of the word 'controversial' in the news. It's almost as bad as the word Alleged, when there is video evidence of the Perp hacking someone to death.
Simply put. Hackers are considered to be committing a crime when they redirect your web traffic, but for some strange reason no one is pointing that out in the media when an ISP does it.
Isn't it bad enough that with DPI, all your Internet traffic is being monitored by some machine, that any person could easily pull the data from, about your personal and private communications. If the Copyright Mafia gets it's way in Canada, the police are going to use DPI to watch your traffic, just in case you might do something that the Government does not like. And no judge needed or warrant either, for the initial information of your account details Citizen. -- Consumer Rights is more than just a suggestion. | |
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 Hindenpeter8
join:2009-06-03 Toronto, ON
·Rogers Hi-Speed
| Disclosure anyone?
I loved loathed last year when Rogers started doing this and didn't tell anyone. It's one thing to do it then inform customers of the practice, but to do it without telling anyone is downright sleezy. I actually thought their DNS had been hijacked by some hacker with really good graphic design skills.
The last time I checked it does not happen for SSL connections (https), can anyone confirm the same for Bell? | |
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 chronoss2009
join:2008-09-23
·TekSavvy Solutions..
2 edits | Bell illegal hacking secondary DNS if i have legal rights to my own services running what does anyone have to remove a comment that bell steals my dns and then redirects it as THEY see fit.
IF its as said that secondary DNS will fall to bell Canada that is theft outright and a form a hacking and should and could be a federal offense. | |
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 justsomeguy
join:2007-10-08 London, ON
| not experiencing this I'm a sympatico customer, using sympatico DNS and I am not experiencing this.
I've tried typing in several domains that dont exist into my browser and I do not get redirected anywhere, I get my "Server not found" error page in my browser. (firefox)
Maybe there is some browser component installed in these people's Internet Explorer, when I type a domain that doesnt exist into IE8, I get "redirected" to google with the non-existant domain I typed in already entered into the search box.
So maybe these people have a Bell Search component installed in Internet Explorer like I have for google. | |
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 |   mlerner Premium join:2000-11-25 Nepean, ON | Re: not experiencing this It could be that the DNS servers assigned to your connection are not affected but we do know this is deployed on Bells end, the same software is used by some of the American providers. | |
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 PapaMidnight
join:2009-01-13 Baltimore, MD
| OpenDNS Well, the advantage of OpenDNS is that a mis-spelling actually has a chance of redirecting you to the proper URL. For example, I'm typing »www.google.c, and miss the o and instead type m, I'll get redirected to google.com instead of a failed attempt to access google.cm. If there is no redirection, then I get a list of suggestions which may be pretty accurate in determining where I wish to go. | |
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  pog Premium join:2004-06-03 Kihei, HI
·Hawaiian Telcom
| 404 ??? Am I missing something? too nitpicky?
I thought 404... not found, formal http error ...is returned by the server. The server you were trying to reach.
DNS redirection, OTOH... isn't that for cases in which there is no record in DNS?
IOW... how does DNS redirection replace a 404? Wouldn't it merely replace the "page not found" browser error. -- My Site | |
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 |   hswerdfe
@gc.ca
| Re: There's nothing inherently wrong with DNS redirection. that article is ridiculous. * It assumes all browsers work like browsers from 20th century, it is 2009 and my browser (along with most others) redirects me to relevant website after a domain not found error? * it assumes that the world wide web is all that exists on the internet. what about email, telnet, news, ping, etc.. | |
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  Terry Johnso
@bell.ca
| I've filled a complaint - join me. After being passed around between Bell reps that didn't know this had been done, and finally being directed to the "opt out" which turned out not to be a real opt out mechanism (setting a cookie - and if you "opt out" they just fake the browser error page?!?) I filled a complaint with the Commissioner for Complaints for Telecommunications Services, gave Bell the complaint number and told them they had 4 hours to remove it from my connection.
»www.ccts-cprst.ca
Please join me in filling a complaint and requesting that this "service" be either withdrawn or offered on a opt-in only basis.
Please note this service isn't even on Bell's own network - it is hosted be Infospace in the United States - so the Privacy Commissioner might also be interested in hearing from you. | |
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 |   john12345
@toronto.edu | Re: I've filled a complaint - join me. This is certainly a serious privacy intrusion by Bell. There is no easy opt-out. The customers never opted-in for Bell to log there queries and every misspelling. I do suggest others to complain to both Bell and the privacy commission. | |
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 |   feedinchange
@bell.ca | Added my complaint. Thanks for providing the link. Now looking into OpenDNS and possibly switch to teksavvy for my isp. | |
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  bigguns
@bell.ca | How to sidestep Bell search redirect OK, so when I type "apple.com" into Safari it always used to resolve correctly. Now it comes up with Bell's suggested sites instead. Indulge me, how can I sidestep this extremely annoying feature??!!! I hate Bell. | |
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