Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google search
Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google search
Hi, sincerely sorry for my poor english, it's not my native language. I'm using NoScript 2.1.8 under linux and Firefox 7.0.1. Today while I type something to search in Google appears something like the following message (sorry for the english translation): NoScript block a <META>; redirect whithin <NOSCRIPT> element:http://www.google.es/search?sc... in 0 seconds.
Every search I do in Google appears the message, I must click on Follow redirect to view the search results and when Google show me the results when I click on the link that I want to view appears the message again, I must click on Follow redirect to access that link. It's strange, I tried NoScript 2.1.7 with the same result. I don't change my NoScript Options, they are the same with every update (and yes I have marked Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements in every NoScript version without problems). I never had Google in my NoScript whitelist as permanent option, I permit webpages one by one and I delete webpages in whitelist options when I exit Firefox, only stay the NoScript default grayed ones.
I think it's not a NoScript bug, perhaps Google change something but really it's very annoying. Very strange. No problem until now. Does anyone have this problem?
Greetings to all.
Every search I do in Google appears the message, I must click on Follow redirect to view the search results and when Google show me the results when I click on the link that I want to view appears the message again, I must click on Follow redirect to access that link. It's strange, I tried NoScript 2.1.7 with the same result. I don't change my NoScript Options, they are the same with every update (and yes I have marked Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements in every NoScript version without problems). I never had Google in my NoScript whitelist as permanent option, I permit webpages one by one and I delete webpages in whitelist options when I exit Firefox, only stay the NoScript default grayed ones.
I think it's not a NoScript bug, perhaps Google change something but really it's very annoying. Very strange. No problem until now. Does anyone have this problem?
Greetings to all.
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:7.0.1) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/7.0.1
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
November 03,2011
I have also noticed today that Google is severely slowed by the Meta Redirect blockings.
Something at Google has changed.
I was using v2.1.5 and now v2.1.8 no difference.
In order to use Google I turned off:
"Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements"
I would rather go back and keep this turned on, especially since this is a Global option.
Google was better when it was a simple search site, never needing any javascript from NoScript.
Thanks Giorgio!
I have also noticed today that Google is severely slowed by the Meta Redirect blockings.
Something at Google has changed.
I was using v2.1.5 and now v2.1.8 no difference.
In order to use Google I turned off:
"Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements"
I would rather go back and keep this turned on, especially since this is a Global option.
Google was better when it was a simple search site, never needing any javascript from NoScript.
Thanks Giorgio!
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:6.0.2) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/6.0.2
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
You may wish to try this site instead: https://ssl.scroogle.org.
No cookies, no storing logs of search queries, you can block META again, etc.
And NO Javascript required.
I have no connection with that site, and am not responsible for what they do or don't do. Just a suggestion.
No cookies, no storing logs of search queries, you can block META again, etc.
And NO Javascript required.

I have no connection with that site, and am not responsible for what they do or don't do. Just a suggestion.
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.2.23) Gecko/20110920 Firefox/3.6.23
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
Yes you're right, it appears that Google has changed something, never had problem while searching something. I don't like turn off the Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements option. No problems with Bing and Yahoo web search engines, only with Google. It's very strange and very annoying.me wrote:November 03,2011
I have also noticed today that Google is severely slowed by the Meta Redirect blockings.
Something at Google has changed.
I was using v2.1.5 and now v2.1.8 no difference.
In order to use Google I turned off:
"Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements"
I would rather go back and keep this turned on, especially since this is a Global option.
Google was better when it was a simple search site, never needing any javascript from NoScript.
Thanks Giorgio!
By the way, thanks Tom T. for your advice and information.
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:7.0.1) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/7.0.1
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
On some quicksearch bookmarks, which use google search, inserting &gbv=1 avoids the meta redirect for me. But on others, where &gbv=1 and &ei=xxx gets inserted by the redirect, that doesn't help.
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1; rv:7.0) Gecko/20110923 Firefox/7.0 SeaMonkey/2.4 Lightning/1.0b7
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
It appears it works on all quicksearches (and so it does on SmartSearch). Seems I did something wrong before.
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1; rv:7.0) Gecko/20110923 Firefox/7.0 SeaMonkey/2.4 Lightning/1.0b7
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
You are right Mc, try to change your browser homepage to "http://www.google.co.uk/webhp?sclient=p ... &source=hp" (without quotes) and search something, that avoid meta redirect for me too. But when &ei=xxx its included appears again the meta redirect.Mc wrote:On some quicksearch bookmarks, which use google search, inserting &gbv=1 avoids the meta redirect for me. But on others, where &gbv=1 and &ei=xxx gets inserted by the redirect, that doesn't help.
Regards
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:7.0.1) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/7.0.1
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
Without success for now, with &gbv=1 I avoid the first meta redirect (as said Mc) but not the following ones including &ei=xxx. (And for my above post don't change your browser homepage just type the address in your browser, sorry for the error).Decklan wrote:You are right Mc, try to change your browser homepage to "http://www.google.co.uk/webhp?sclient=p ... &source=hp" (without quotes) and search something, that avoid meta redirect for me too. But when &ei=xxx its included appears again the meta redirect.Mc wrote:On some quicksearch bookmarks, which use google search, inserting &gbv=1 avoids the meta redirect for me. But on others, where &gbv=1 and &ei=xxx gets inserted by the redirect, that doesn't help.
Regards
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:7.0.1) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/7.0.1
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
With quicksearch all searches run. So you may use it for now. It's also called keyword search.
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Using_keyword_searches
The keyword bookmarks are also used in SmartSearch, btw, which is very handy.
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/smartsearch/
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Using_keyword_searches
The keyword bookmarks are also used in SmartSearch, btw, which is very handy.
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/smartsearch/
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1; rv:7.0) Gecko/20110923 Firefox/7.0 SeaMonkey/2.4 Lightning/1.0b7
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
Again sorry for my poor english. Thanks Mc for your help, both methods run flawlessly for now and is a temporary solution. I was thinking that all this problem was related to more hard tracking code of urls from Google, but now I have installed User Agent Switcher addon for Firefox and looks like the problem its gone, no more meta redirects warnings for now and no need to disable "Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements" option in NoScript. I use linux and Firefox 7.0.1 as I posted at first and now perhaps you will see that my user agent it's different. I'm testing this and no problems for now, please I request people having problems with meta redirects warnings while Google search to test this solution or try change user agent manually and say if it's a good workaround.Mc wrote:With quicksearch all searches run. So you may use it for now. It's also called keyword search.
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Using_keyword_searches
The keyword bookmarks are also used in SmartSearch, btw, which is very handy.
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/smartsearch/
Greetings to all
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 8.0; Windows NT 6.1)
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
Forgot to comment that it's looks like a Firefox - Google related problem, browsing fine now with Opera 11.52 under linux.Decklan wrote:Again sorry for my poor english. Thanks Mc for your help, both methods run flawlessly for now and is a temporary solution. I was thinking that all this problem was related to more hard tracking code of urls from Google, but now I have installed User Agent Switcher addon for Firefox and looks like the problem its gone, no more meta redirects warnings for now and no need to disable "Forbid META redirections inside <NOSCRIPT> elements" option in NoScript. I use linux and Firefox 7.0.1 as I posted at first and now perhaps you will see that my user agent it's different. I'm testing this and no problems for now, please I request people having problems with meta redirects warnings while Google search to test this solution or try change user agent manually and say if it's a good workaround.Mc wrote:With quicksearch all searches run. So you may use it for now. It's also called keyword search.
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Using_keyword_searches
The keyword bookmarks are also used in SmartSearch, btw, which is very handy.
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/smartsearch/
Greetings to all
Opera/9.80 (X11; Linux i686; U; es-ES) Presto/2.9.168 Version/11.52
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
When I uninstall User Agent Switcher addon the meta redirection problem appears again, I don't know if this is a problem of linux and windows users under Firefox or only linux users. Because linux is my default OS I can't test this on Windows PC. As said before with Opera 11.52 all is fine but my default browser is Firefox with NoScript and my only chance to workaround this problem is to install User Agent Switcher.
Regards
Regards
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:7.0.1) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/7.0.1
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
HA!Decklan wrote:When I uninstall User Agent Switcher addon the meta redirection problem appears again, I don't know if this is a problem of linux and windows users under Firefox or only linux users. Because linux is my default OS I can't test this on Windows PC. As said before with Opera 11.52 all is fine but my default browser is Firefox with NoScript and my only chance to workaround this problem is to install User Agent Switcher.


Which is one more of many reasons why I don't like Google and prefer the alternative mentioned above.
Interesting finding - thanks both for your information.
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.2.23) Gecko/20110920 MSIE 8.0
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
I have done more research on this.
UserAgent does not seem to matter.
If I use FireFox v3.6.23 or OLDER, Google.com works like before, O.K.
If I use FireFox v5.0 or Newer, then the META redirects pop up from NoScript.(only recently and increasingly)
I have used NoScript v2.1.8 with both FFv3.6.23 and FFv6.0.?.
The thing which works is an older FireFox.
Something is very different with the newer rolling release style FireFoxes.
Please note that I do keep many versions of FireFox on my computer which can be simultaneously run.
They all have their own Mozilla sub-directories, and I am totally using Debian Squeeze O.S.
But I try to keep them very similar in configuration, in which most everything is always blocked.
Thanks for NoScript, hope this helps.
UserAgent does not seem to matter.
If I use FireFox v3.6.23 or OLDER, Google.com works like before, O.K.
If I use FireFox v5.0 or Newer, then the META redirects pop up from NoScript.(only recently and increasingly)
I have used NoScript v2.1.8 with both FFv3.6.23 and FFv6.0.?.
The thing which works is an older FireFox.
Something is very different with the newer rolling release style FireFoxes.
Please note that I do keep many versions of FireFox on my computer which can be simultaneously run.
They all have their own Mozilla sub-directories, and I am totally using Debian Squeeze O.S.
But I try to keep them very similar in configuration, in which most everything is always blocked.
Thanks for NoScript, hope this helps.
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en; rv:1.9.2.23) Gecko/20110920
Re: Block META redirect within NOSCRIPT element at Google se
I reproduced the redirect on both 3.6.23, which is presently my default browser, and on Fx 2.0.0.20.me wrote:...If I use FireFox v3.6.23 or OLDER, Google.com works like before, O.K.
If I use FireFox v5.0 or Newer, then the META redirects pop up from NoScript.(only recently and increasingly)
I have used NoScript v2.1.8 with both FFv3.6.23 and FFv6.0.?.
The thing which works is an older FireFox.
It appears to be a scripting-permissions issue. I don't allow Google.
When I temp-allow google.com and gstatic.com, then not only does the redirect not appear, but also the auto-complete search suggestions box appears and works, which it didn't with script disallowed.
Still doesn't explain why changing my useragent to MSIE 8.0 eliminated the redirect, although the suggestions box still did not appear, as I did not allow the scripting.
With Google not allowed, the Surrogate Script should run. I'll ask Giorgio if it's possible to enhance the surrogate so that the meta redirect does not occur.
EDIT: gstatic.com appears not to be required, but it was a very brief test. It might be needed for other functions.
If using RequestPolicy, as I do, requests from Google must be allowed, or at least, to the links you want; else, the links don't work.
Last edited by Tom T. on Sat Nov 05, 2011 11:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: typo
Reason: typo
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.2.23) Gecko/20110920 Firefox/3.6.23