We're in the middle of switching our website from http to https.
Our ads seem to be working on the https version of the website, we use DFP and we bring in competition via PreBid.
But for whatever reason, our 728x90 ads are always showing as house ads, whereas the 300x250, 320x250, and 300x600 ads are correctly working and showing ads.
Any idea why on the secure version of our website, the 728x90 ads wouldn't be working?
There is no generic response for that situation. There are too many possible issues.
The first thing you need to do is to:
Create a simple HTML file with the 728x90 slot inside it and of course the JavaScript code to call DFP.
Open this HTML file with Chrome.
Use the F12 key to open Chrome DevTools.
Check the Console.
For any unsecured resources, Chrome displays a “Mixed Content” message
in the Console. Some text will be in red or yellow.
Red: Errors that indicate the resource was blocked.
Yellow: Warnings that should be fixed.
Related
I signed up at https://www.google.com/recaptcha/admin when I was setting up a forum page at mysite.com/forum but the method I used added a badge to the bottom right of every page on my site.
The badge looks like this right here.
I dislike the badge and my mobile users are very frustrated about it.
In an effort to remove it, I clicked the trash icon to delete my domain from the reCAPTCHA Admin Console area on Google. Two days later and it hasn't gone away.
I don't even use the forum anymore, yet somehow Google is able to insert an iframe onto every page of my site for some kind of invisible reCAPTCHA.
I didn't add any code to my site. I don't understand how they are doing this. It even shows on Firefox. When I search for how to remove the badge, I only see CSS solutions.
I do not want a CSS solution. I want it permanently gone. As if I never added my domain to their service. Maybe there is a specific amount of time before their service knows I deleted my domain from it?
My site uses Cloudflare and on the first visit you see the badge. Note that I am NOT talking about the challenge page.
How do I remove the "protected by reCAPTCHA" badge without using CSS?
remove
reCAPTCHA
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I'm building a webapp that I want to use on a FireTV browser (Firefox) and when I do so, my Facebook images are appearing as broken links.
The images appear normally on all other devices/browsers I've tested (multiple on OSX, Android)
Initially I thought the the firetv browser wasn't liking hot-linked images for some reason as I'm loading them via the graph API, however I'm able to get images hotlinked from other sites to show up just fine on the fireTV as well.... It seems to be something specific about the facebook URLs it doesn't like? Does anyone have any ideas, or know of any tools to help debug it better?
This is what the img elements look like that I'm rendering, for example:
<img src="https://graph.facebook.com/v2.6/112816289586034/picture?type=large" />
Facebook Graph API returns a profile photo URL with a 302 redirect, which apparently is not Amazon FireTV friendly.
The solution was to include redirect=false as a url parameter on the API request, which causes FB to return a JSON object including regular image url that loads as expected.
I have a QR code image that's embedded from the Google Charts API. Recently it stopped working, but I haven't changed anything in my code.
Here's the page (note the broken images): [redacted]
As you can see, the images are embedded as http:// but when they are loaded, they're redirecting to the https:// URL on the google domain, which is broken.
Why is this redirect happening?
Edit: forgot to add -- what's even stranger is that if you view the image in a new tab, then change http to https (in effect, making the url the exact one that was originally requested),
it loads fine.
Edit #2 removed the link to my test site, as I've fixed the problem.
Turns out the google charts domain has changed. The new one is:
https://chart.googleapis.com
do not use
http://chart.apis.google.com
I've found the page that plain http images with a https/ssl page can't be displayed without warnings. Are there any way to display a picture from another http:// web-site on your https://web-site without warnings? (suppose you have a permission to display that picture on you web-site).
Chrome put a yellow triangle on SSL locker: "...However, this page includes other resources, that are not secure..."
IE displays a warning when a page loads: "Do you want to view only the webpage content that was delivered securely?"
So, how to display a picture on https:// page if it is on another web-server?
You can use the information on this article on Encosia. Basically you have to use a // syntax for your urls in order to use the same protocol in all cases. For example, if you have a https request, the following
//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.4/jquery.min.js
will hit google's CDN using the https protocol. However, if you don't have control over the other server, i think you're out of luck. If you do have control over the other server i'd recommend using the method described in the article above by allowing your content server to serve both protocols.
I have some pages that are sent via HTTPS. Internet Explorer sometimes complains about "This webpage contains content that will not be delivered using a secure HTTPS".
I looked in the html source to confirm all content calls (href, src, etc...) are sent via https. My CSS files use relative paths. But I'm still getting these warnings.
Is there an easy way to track down which items are not sent via HTTPS?
You could fire up Fiddler to see what exactly IE is requesting over regular HTTP.
In Fiddler's default configuration, HTTPS requests will show up with a lock and CONNECT as the host. HTTP requests will have a non-lock icon.
(source: josh3736.net)
I usually use Firefox + Firebug (the "Net" tab) to find the offending request. You could also use Fiddler for this. (with any browser)
I've used the following site before - I finding it easier than loading up firebug / fiddler.
http://www.whynopadlock.com/
You can use SslCheck
It's a free online tool that crawls a website recursively (following all internal links) and scans for unsecure content - images, scripts and CSS.
(disclaimer: I'm one of the developers)
In Google Chrome, similar to Firefox w/ FireBug, you can use the 'Network' tab of the Developer Tools console.
Open the Developers Tools console, go to the 'Network' tab, and reload the target page. Any warnings with the page, such as insecure content being loaded, will be indicated with the number of warning and an 'alert' icon in the bottom right corner (Chrome v23.x). Click on the icon and a list of the warnings, in this case, the resources being loaded insecurely, will be displayed.
Using following tools could help:
Firefox's FireBug . opening tab Network shows you connection details to multiple resource
Fiddler - acts as sniffer allows you explore details of connect.
using firefox - view generated source vs viewing source
there is probably a javascript file that is creating a div/iframe that is insecure