> >> > User-Agent: Links (2.1pre15; MirBSD 7 i386; 113x20) This one is broken; the version number should be outside the comment and separated by a / from the agent name. > >> (2) where did the libwww in his UA-string come *from*? > > Stock Lynx.
In particular, Lynx is probably the only desk top browser that uses User-Agent properly, although some WAP browsers seem to do so. The problem of discrimination against libwww came up recently on the [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list. My guess is that this is a problem with some browser capabilities package that is giving a positive indication that some bells and whistles feature is missing, and the application level code is rejecting because of the lack of that feature. The other likely possibility is that it is being perceived as an automated download tool. Whilst Lynx is sometimes used for this, it often against explicit rules in the permitted use for commercial sites (ones with entertainment, or real information, paid for by advertising, typically). Some such sites will take active measures to block such tools. They will probably tolerate some loss of advertising to manual text only accesses, but not any attempt to extract large amounts of information without a human being presented with the adverts. Another possible factor is security. If you are accessing a secure site, they, or their insurance company, may insist that there is someone to attempt to sue if the security is compromised because of a flaw in the SSL implementation (that should trigger on the SSL string, though, for Lynx - older Lynx SSL implementations failed to authenticate the site). Yet another possibility is that some organisations feed keywords stuffing pages to search engines, and might have mistaken the unusual User-Agent string for a search engine crawler. This is considered unethical by search engine operators, of course. _______________________________________________ Lynx-dev mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lynx-dev
