by Tom T. » Tue May 29, 2012 5:51 am
Pending Giorgio's return, I'd ask first: Can you finish checking out without allowing it? If so, then do so, and don't allow it.
I've never seen a site, or a script name, that starts with
https://scripts, but I'd hesitate to allow it.
If you can't check out, then as a workaround pending Giorgio's solution, you might install
JSView add-on, then use it to look at which scripts are in https protocol.
If they are site scripts, or third parties that you trust, you could manually add them to the Whitelist (NS Options > Whitelist).
Also checked
Recently Blocked Sites sub-menu for relevant and trusted names, such as "Temporarily allow all from raxco.com", or similar.
I hope this helps.
ETA, @ Giorgio: FWIW, when I duplicated OP's permissions, but not allowing https/scripts,
RequestPolicy did indeed show a request to "scripts". (or with full addresses enabled in RP, to "https://scripts") Very strange.
Pending Giorgio's return, I'd ask first: Can you finish checking out without allowing it? If so, then do so, and don't allow it.
I've never seen a site, or a script name, that starts with https://scripts, but I'd hesitate to allow it.
If you can't check out, then as a workaround pending Giorgio's solution, you might install [url=https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/jsview]JSView add-on[/url], then use it to look at which scripts are in https protocol.
If they are site scripts, or third parties that you trust, you could manually add them to the Whitelist (NS Options > Whitelist).
Also checked [i]Recently Blocked Sites[/i] sub-menu for relevant and trusted names, such as "Temporarily allow all from raxco.com", or similar.
I hope this helps.
[b]
ETA, @ Giorgio: [/b]
FWIW, when I duplicated OP's permissions, but not allowing https/scripts, [url=https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/9727]RequestPolicy[/url] did indeed show a request to "scripts". (or with full addresses enabled in RP, to "https://scripts") Very strange.