ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:Mickey Wrote:ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:What network applications does your school have? Apart from Internet Explorer?
Firefox in library computers, the rest are apps that download stuff from the internet, Microsoft office to download templates from, Dreamweaver works to connect to a server, that's all that i can think of :/
With Firefox, I assume you can get into the options dialog and there's no specified proxy or proxy configuration script there?
If so, what happens if you rename the firefox.exe to something else (if you have permission to do so)? If you can't try copying it to somewhere else and try running it and see if you can access the internet (note, you can't start multiple instances of Firefox so remember to close it before trying to run it).
Can't rename/move firefox.exe in the program files folder, already tried it. I'll try copying on monday when school starts.
Renaming i can't do, copying has no effect :/
Mickey Wrote:Renaming i can't do, copying has no effect :/
What do you mean by "no effect"? Can you run the copy? Does the copy have access to the internet?
ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:Mickey Wrote:Renaming i can't do, copying has no effect :/
What do you mean by "no effect"? Can you run the copy? Does the copy have access to the internet?
I copied to D: (flash drive) and i can run it and it does connect to the internet, renaming it to rundll32 doesn't change anything
Looks like library computers are different :p
![[Image: 23sj3w7.jpg]](http://i40.tinypic.com/23sj3w7.jpg)
Firefox is working now :D
but putty isn't D:
Quote:---------------------------
PuTTY Fatal Error
---------------------------
Proxy error: 502 Proxy Error ( The specified Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) port is not allowed. ISA Server is not configured to allow SSL requests from this port. Most Web browsers use port 443 for SSL requests. )
---------------------------
OK
---------------------------
When i try port 443
Quote:---------------------------
PuTTY Fatal Error
---------------------------
Network error: Software caused connection abort
---------------------------
OK
---------------------------
Mickey Wrote:I copied to D: (flash drive) and i can run it and it does connect to the internet, renaming it to rundll32 doesn't change anything
So there's unlikely to be a software firewall blocking stuff = you must've done something wrong somewhere, OR, they have some custom system (unlikely though).
Mickey Wrote:Looks like library computers are different :p
![[Image: 23sj3w7.jpg]](http://i40.tinypic.com/23sj3w7.jpg)
Firefox is working now :D
but putty isn't D:
Quote:---------------------------
PuTTY Fatal Error
---------------------------
Proxy error: 502 Proxy Error ( The specified Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) port is not allowed. ISA Server is not configured to allow SSL requests from this port. Most Web browsers use port 443 for SSL requests. )
---------------------------
OK
---------------------------
When i try port 443
Quote:---------------------------
PuTTY Fatal Error
---------------------------
Network error: Software caused connection abort
---------------------------
OK
---------------------------
Lol @ their proxy blocks. Haha, you got an ISA server.
Bleh :/
What's an isa server? no putty?
They restricted program that could run using registry
Code:
HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer\RestrictRun
|
Still can't figure out how to run putty but messing with registry is fun :D
The server is probably blocking HTTP Connect method on port 80, which means the SSH server will need to listen on port 443 (or you tunnel through a second HTTP proxy).
For non-library computers, if you think it's the software firewall, you could hack the admin account if you can boot off CD/USB and they're using the default XP login system.
ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:The server is probably blocking HTTP Connect method on port 80, which means the SSH server will need to listen on port 443 (or you tunnel through a second HTTP proxy).
For non-library computers, if you think it's the software firewall, you could hack the admin account if you can boot off CD/USB and they're using the default XP login system.
Library computers are the ones with no proxy settings, and they have bios locked so no booting from cd