Just as an update, I have
managed to view a web page from the same subnet as my home one from my place of
work. Which suggests to me that it's not a matter of my place of work's FW
doing the filtering (unless they are filtering my IP address
specifically!).
I fear it's time to buy a new router and
see if that fixes it.
Thanks for the reply.
If it is an FW issue then it must either be
my router dropping the packets on the basis of both the IP address it is
asked to send them to and the HTTP response code, or a corporate FW dropping incoming packets based on a combination of
IP address and response code.
The former seems unlikely to me; I'd be
surprised if my router was up to that sort of cleverness. It certainly
isn't logging anything like that, and I certainly haven't configured the
firewall like that myself.
I'd be a bit surprised by the latter, too;
my work don't seem to filter anything, and the client I'm currently at have a
system of informing you if you request something they don't approve of.
Though I suppose my ISP might have been blacklisted by someone or
other?
>
>What is different between clients
who *can* access the site and those
>who cannot?
I'm unsure; I thought it might be that
"home" users seem to get in OK and "corporate" not, but my wife can get in
from her work (a big oil multinational). I haven't identified a common
factor yet.
>Are you sure the logs are really
identical too?
I believe so, though I'm currently at
work so I'll have to examine them again tonight. There's definitely
nothing in the error log.
>Can you post an example URL for us to
try?
(PS - apologies if this is poorly formatted, the
Outlook Web Cient doesn't seem to give me many options about playing nice with
mailing lists.)