Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Ovo će web mjesto raditi na ograničen način, dok obavljamo održavanje stranice. Ako neki članak ne riješi tvoj problem i ako želiš postaviti pitanje, naša zajednica za podršku spremna je pomoći na Twitteru @FirefoxSupport i na Redditu /r/firefox.

Pretraži podršku

Izbjegni prevare podrške. Nikad te nećemo tražiti da nas nazoveš, da nam pošalješ telefonski broj ili da podijeliš osobne podatke. Prijavi sumnjive radnje pomoću opcije „Prijavi zlouporabu”.

Saznaj više

How do I prevent being redirected to a region-specific page? I keep being sent to a .AU instead of the US version of the site, even when I type it in specificly.

  • 2 odgovora
  • 25 ima ovaj problem
  • 1 prikaz
  • Posljednji odgovor od Stinkface27

more options

I am trying to visit a website (www.citychiconline.com) and I am repeatedly redirected to www.citychic.com.au, which is the Australian version of the website. I often am redirected to regional pages, but the problem is usually easily fixed by manually typing in the desired site. I have already disabled the automatic region detection in Firefox, so I am confused as to why this problem would persist. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

I am trying to visit a website (www.citychiconline.com) and I am repeatedly redirected to www.citychic.com.au, which is the Australian version of the website. I often am redirected to regional pages, but the problem is usually easily fixed by manually typing in the desired site. I have already disabled the automatic region detection in Firefox, so I am confused as to why this problem would persist. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Svi odgovori (2)

more options

Web sites can use the location of your ISP to redirect you to a different server or regional site; that is difficult to defeat without a proxy or anonymizing service. If the site uses Java or Flash, they often can obtain additional system information such as your language. They also might set a cookie indicating your preferred site, although that is easy to clear (right-click the page, View Page Info > Security > View Cookies).

Since each site has its own strategies for segmenting its customers, you might have to experiment with a variety of strategies.

more options

Thanks very much, jscher2000. I was afraid that it would have something to do with my ISP. I'm not terribly comfortable with playing with proxies so I probably won't be tampering with that. I've cleared the cookies on the page and that doesn't seem to be changing anything. Thanks again for the information. :)