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I have recently noticed that when i visit certain websites, there are usually links tied to certain words. I can't find an answer from where i have looked, and i have noticed similar trends from several websites, but especially my own.
Is this a programming, hack issue that can be solved by adding specific code or is it my hosting company doing this, or does it mean that someone has gained control to my ftp portal?
Please see the image below of what i mean and any help would be appreciated.
They're called in-text contextual advertisements, though they probably have many names. Here's a wiki article about them:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-text_advertising
I don't know if Google offer these (due to how annoying they are), but I'm pretty sure AdBrite does:
http://www.adbrite.com/mb/exchange_publishers_ad_formats.php
You probably have adware installed on your computer. Some web searches point to browser addons called "Facetheme" and "Better Links".
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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.
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I have a really really big question which is how to write a social networking website like facebook? I want to know which language should I use and why. And also the relationship of them or the whole structure of website. Only a general idea of blue print will be all right. However I don't mind if u can tell me things in detail. Thanks in advance.
Simply put: You can't realistically without a huge team of experts and lots of money. If you're a full-stack developer I'm sure you can pull off a website that has user profiles and a commenting system just with HTML, CSS, javascript, AJAX, and something like PHP/MySQL on the backend (lots of options here). Facebook is obviously a lot more complicated than that though, especially with all the asynchronous features going on such as the chat system.
Extended answer: https://www.forbes.com/sites/quora/2013/05/20/how-is-a-facebook-like-site-actually-created-from-scratch/#71ee985bdd2d
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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
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I am looking for a site that if I disabled JavaScript the site would be useless, and what other functions would I not be able to use. Does anyone have a name of a site that I can look at? I want to know what no longer works.
You're looking at one right now.
Not quite sure if this is really programming related... but YouTube and Google Docs for instance.
http://jsfiddle.net
Most sites that use javascript heavily become less useful rather than useless. In order to do that, many of them will implement the important parts twice - once with javascript, and a less sophisticated version without.
Despite the popularity of the question, this one doesn't even load w/o JS.
http://www.graphikdesign.it/
Google.com looses it's Instant search capability with Javascript off.
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When i like a certain Javascript (for menu highlighting or so) used by some website, it would be pretty easy to copy this script from that site's source-code and use it in mine.
I would consider doing so as unauthorized use of intellectual property, since I have been granted the right to use this javascript in my browser, but certainly not to copy it and use it for my own purposes, even though it is so deceptivly easy to reuse other people's work without asking for permission.
I don't know much about online-copyright law, but is my stomach feeling right in this case?
Yes. You don't have a license to use it elsewhere.