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Apr 4th, 2008 19:35
ha mo, Henk-Johan van Rantwijk, Tim Powell, Anca Mosoiu,
Yes, firewalls and proxies can be configured to block JavaScript. The proxy or firewall reads through the HTML and strips out JavaScript code. You can get more information about the specifics from the firewall/proxy vendors. But not all firewall do that. And you may need to configure it first. It's really stupid I think. HTML is useless without the Javascript part to build Dynamic generated context. http://www.businessian.com http://www.computerstan.com http://www.financestan.com http://www.healthstan.com http://www.internetstan.com http://www.moneyenews.com http://www.technologystan.com http://www.zobab.com http://www.healthinhealth.com