See the proxy used in the browser [closed] - javascript

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Closed 4 months ago.
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I use VPN browser extensions and therefore there is a different proxy on my browser than the whole system.
I want to see what exactly is the proxy information (port and address) used in my browser. How can I do this?
The browser I use is Edge and Chrome, and my operating system is Windows

You can log your network activity and find out your proxy setting within the json file. Just go to:
For Edge: edge://net-export/
For Chrome: chrome://net-export/

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deceptive site ahead warning on chrome for my website [closed]

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Closed 1 year ago.
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I'm hosting a side project with firebase, and for some reason I'm getting a warning from chrome when I try to visit it (but not from Firefox). I scanned the website for malware with multiple services (sucuri, scanner.pcrisk), and couldn't find anything. The website is just a webpage, no server. Can anybody help me understand what is going on?
Website:
https://netflix-app-4bcc7.web.app/
Notably, on Firefox it's not blocked by the padlock symbol has a warning indicator, which when I click on tells me that some of the content is not secure and there is mixed content. Have trouble understanding what this means though
It could be that your website is mimicking the actual Netflix site. Chrome might have noticed this, and thus has determined that your website could be a phishing site.
If this is a side project, perhaps changing the website name and especially the url to something more unique will resolve this issue.

RSS Feed in Flutter blocked by Cloudflare - Execute javascript in Dart [closed]

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Closed 1 year ago.
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I'm making a RSS reader in flutter, however my requests to the feed are blocked by Cloudflare.
I've been looking for a way to emulate a browser with javascript enabled, since it is needed to pass the Cloudflare test, but nothing seems to have that functionality.
What I need is a simulated browser, that renders the page requested, execute the javascript contained in the page. I haven't found anything that claims to do that aside from webview_flutter, which is a widget and thus cannot be used I my case.
I find it weird that there is no such thing as a simulated browser for Flutter, so I must have missed something.

What port should Node.JS bind to? [closed]

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Closed 7 years ago.
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I have implemented real time chat using Socket.io with Node.JS
Everything works perfectly, except it did not work on my computer. I narrowed the problem down to the fact my router was by default blocking the outbound port (9239)
The problem is, I cant diagnose random users of my webpage's firewall issue. So I need to know what port I should bind node.js to so that everybody can use it.
I could create its own url and bind it to 80 or 443, but I have read that may be bad practice?
There are many ways to do this. One way is have a web server (like Apache or nginx) field the HTTP(80) or HTTPS(443) traffic, serve static images, and pass certain requests onto node.js. On unix, binding to a port below port 1024 requires root access.

Canviz example don't work [closed]

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Closed 6 years ago.
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I've downloaded Canviz (it's a Javascript library for drawing graphs). I've unzipped the archive. I open, with Chrome, index.html, which is supposed to be an example. A "loading" message appears... and never disappears.
What am I supposed to do please ?
I worked with this library a few months ago.
You also need to have graphviz installed in order to create the graphs canviz will draw.
When you have installed, you have to use the function load with the url parameters in order to create the graph.
WebBrowsers have an option to enable javascript or not. make sure your browser enable it.
here's an example for Mozilla : Mozilla example

Firefox Vs Chrome from web developers prespective [closed]

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Closed 11 years ago.
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I hope I am asking a question that fits Stack Overflow standards. I am curious to know from web developers point of view, what do you prefer Firefox or Google Chrome. Is Firefox or chrome your best choice of developing web apps and websites. Which one do you prefer and why.
I prefer Firefox, as I find it easier thanks mainly to the Web Developer add-on, and a few others. Interestingly, a recently-leaked Google document for internal testers said they had to use Firefox.
Chrome, its built in dev tools are easily as powerful as Firebug, yet no need for an extension.
http://code.google.com/chrome/devtools/docs/overview.html
Chrome also loads up within a few seconds, while Firefox still takes an age to startup, that really bugs me!

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