Hi

Can anybody suggest a way around this problem or point me in the right direction?

I have a genuinely legitimate reason to disable the browser back button, or at least the pages that have anything to do with the PHP application I am working on.

Here is the scenario
A user likes the on-line service provided and decides to purchase it using one of the standard on-line payment methods, typically PayPal.

Once payment has been made, confirmed and received, the user is directed to an customer account creation page. Here the user enters the usual standard account details such as Name, Address, Telephone Number, User-Id, Password and so on.

The application then generates an access code, which is automatically emailed from the application to the customer. As a precaution all PHP sessions variables are cleared, the "customer account creation page" is cleared and the user steered away from the signup part of the application to Google's main navigation page (this last bit being for testing purposes).

Here in lays the problem. After initial creation of the account code and when the back button is pressed a few times, the user eventually return to the "customer account creation page". Which is the step immediately following payment validation. At this point, if the customer wants to create another new account all she or he has to do is, fill it the form once more, press submit and another new account is created. If the user just keeps doing this, he or she just keeps on creating new accounts.

I have tried to disable the browser back button; but am unable to. I have researched JavaScript solutions and learnt, if the user turns off JavaScript, that is that.

Cheers

Paul

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