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#cloudflaretest — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #cloudflaretest, aggregated by home.social.

  1. HOW TO TEST your favourite sites for #CloudFlare surveillance + other nasties.

    1) In a new #TorBrowser tab, hit Ctrl+Shift+E for the #NetworkTab.

    2) Load website.

    3) Order fetched content in NetworkTab by #domainName then check each domain. Ensure that Server is not Cloudflare (or #AmazonS3 = #CloudFront = #amz and MS #azure).

    If its bad, make a BLOK bookmark, if good make ALOW bookmark. Date it (eg. feb'22) so after a year you can test it again.

    #cloudflareTest #deCloudflare #crimeFlare

  2. HOW TO TEST your favourite sites for #CloudFlare surveillance + other nasties.

    1) In a new #TorBrowser tab, hit Ctrl+Shift+E for the #NetworkTab.

    2) Load website.

    3) Order fetched content in NetworkTab by #domainName then check each domain. Ensure that Server is not Cloudflare (or #AmazonS3 = #CloudFront = #amz and MS #azure).

    If its bad, make a BLOK bookmark, if good make ALOW bookmark. Date it (eg. feb'22) so after a year you can test it again.

    #cloudflareTest #deCloudflare #crimeFlare

  3. HOW TO TEST your favourite sites for #CloudFlare surveillance + other nasties.

    1) In a new #TorBrowser tab, hit Ctrl+Shift+E for the #NetworkTab.

    2) Load website.

    3) Order fetched content in NetworkTab by #domainName then check each domain. Ensure that Server is not Cloudflare (or #AmazonS3 = #CloudFront = #amz and MS #azure).

    If its bad, make a BLOK bookmark, if good make ALOW bookmark. Date it (eg. feb'22) so after a year you can test it again.

    #cloudflareTest #deCloudflare #crimeFlare

  4. This is apparently how it happened.

    After a bit of effort a friend developed a special bot called @cloudflaretest. So you could, reply to a link with hashtag #cloudflareTest and both people can learn whether the site is under a #MITM scheme.

    It was specifically designed to only respond to a person once per week, maximum.

    But then…

    1. (A) made a reply to someone (B) with hashtag
    2. (A) instantly delete it
    3. Bot made a reply to (A) and (B)
    4. (B) got angry and call botsinspace owner
    5. Ban

  5. This is apparently how it happened.

    After a bit of effort a friend developed a special bot called @cloudflaretest. So you could, reply to a link with hashtag #cloudflareTest and both people can learn whether the site is under a #MITM scheme.

    It was specifically designed to only respond to a person once per week, maximum.

    But then…

    1. (A) made a reply to someone (B) with hashtag
    2. (A) instantly delete it
    3. Bot made a reply to (A) and (B)
    4. (B) got angry and call botsinspace owner
    5. Ban

  6. @sim
    Hope you don't mind we are away from keyboard atm, doing a #cloudflareTest to save for later.

  7. Three easy steps to test a site for #Cloudflare and other nasties.

    1) In a new #TorBrowser tab, hit Ctrl+Shift+E to bring up the #NetworkTab.

    2) Load the website (optional: strip URL to domain name only),

    3) In the NetworkTab click each #domainName of assets that seem unique to that page. In the column that appears, ensure that Server is not Cloudflare, or #AmazonS3 (or #MicrosoftIIS). If its bad, make a BLOCKMARK bookmark, if good make an ALLOW b'mark. Date it.

    #cloudflareTest #deCloudflare

  8. Three easy steps to test a site for #Cloudflare and other nasties.

    1) In a new #TorBrowser tab, hit Ctrl+Shift+E to bring up the #NetworkTab.

    2) Load the website (optional: strip URL to domain name only),

    3) In the NetworkTab click each #domainName of assets that seem unique to that page. In the column that appears, ensure that Server is not Cloudflare, or #AmazonS3 (or #MicrosoftIIS). If its bad, make a BLOCKMARK bookmark, if good make an ALLOW b'mark. Date it.

    #cloudflareTest #deCloudflare