Some avoidable false positives ?

When run tests against ports 80 and 443 on a Windows Server 2003 system:

Plugin ID 10362 says:

"It is possible to get the source code of the remote ASP scripts by
appending ::$DATA at the end of the request (like GET
/default.asp::$DATA) ASP source code usually contains sensitive
information such as logins and passwords."

Plugin ID 10363 says:

"It is possible to get the source code of the remote ASP scripts by
appending %2e at the end of the request (like GET /default.asp%2e) ASP
source codes usually contain sensitive informations such as logins and
passwords."

Plugin ID 10491 says:

"There is a serious vulnerability in Windows 2000 (unpatched by SP1)
that allows an attacker to view ASP/ASA source code instead of a
processed file. ASP source code can contain sensitive information such
as username's and passwords for ODBC connections."



I seem to recall a case where at least one of these plugins alerted me
to a real problem; however, they also alert when the actual response
from port 80 is:

The page cannot be found
The page you are looking for might have been removed, had its name
changed, or is temporarily unavailable. 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------

Please try the following:
.
.
.
.


and response from port 443 is:

  Internet Explorer cannot display the webpage 
   
   Most likely causes:
You are not connected to the Internet. 
The website is encountering problems. 
There might be a typing error in the address. 
 
   What you can try: 
     Diagnose Connection Problems  

.
.
.
 
--
Carl Nelson
Distributed Systems Support Section, Computer Centre, University of
Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, U.K.
Tel: +44 (0)116 252 2060, Fax: +44 (0)116 252 5027
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