The page <http://www.zope.org/Products/> has a link to the what it says is the current stable release of zope, <http://zope.org/Products/Zope/2.7.2>. On that page, it has a link to "Zope-2.7.2-0.tgz (2.63 M)". But when you try to click on that, you get a page that says: High security alert!!! You are not permitted to download the file "Zope-2.7.2-0.tgz". URL = http://zope.org/Products/Zope/2.7.2/Zope-2.7.2-0.tgz Now just ask anyone who knows me. I'm not a security threat, and I can probably be trusted with a tar archive of Zope 2.7.2.
The page <http://www.zope.org/Products/> has a link to the what it says is the current stable release of zope, <http://zope.org/Products/Zope/2.7.2>. On that page, it has a link to "Zope-2.7.2-0.tgz (2.63 M)". But when you try to click on that, you get a page that says:
High security alert!!! You are not permitted to download the file "Zope-2.7.2-0.tgz". URL = http://zope.org/Products/Zope/2.7.2/Zope-2.7.2-0.tgz
Now just ask anyone who knows me. I'm not a security threat, and I can probably be trusted with a tar archive of Zope 2.7.2.
It is technically impossible that zope.org gives you this message. You probably fell victim to a misconfigured browser, proxy cache or firewall. jens
On Sep 14, 2004, at 2:40 PM, Jens Vagelpohl wrote:
It is technically impossible that zope.org gives you this message. You probably fell victim to a misconfigured browser, proxy cache or firewall.
That was exactly it. It was an aggressively configured content filtering firewall within my corporation. When the message went out, someone on the bcc recognized the error message as coming from equipment that he is responsible for. I wish I knew that this was being set up ahead of time, but I guess the spies don't warn you in advance where they are putting their surveillance equipment. Sorry to have bothered you.
participants (2)
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Andrew Langmead -
Jens Vagelpohl