This happened to me and I found this tool super helpful to get my site unblocked: https://dnsblacklist.org/
I purchased a valuable premium domain to host a personal art collection (of anime cels). For some bizarre reason, the site was inaccessible from my work computer and it was de-listed from Google even if I typed the url itself into search.
I hired a square space specialist to figure out why, to no avail. I then begged our company’s CISO to investigate and it turns out we had some firewall setting on UniFi that blocked the domain because it appeared on a list. Once I checked way back, it turns out that it was as an anime porn aggregator years back. I personally reached out to all the web filters out there (Google, Symantec, bing) and one by one filed tickets for them to mark it as art instead of pornography and it worked. I am now properly crawled on Google but still MIA on Bing, search console is giving me some BS error that’s incomprehensible, typical of MSFT.
I... actually remember that address floating around and it indeed was hentai.
We're talking like 20 years back. Holy shit, my brain is getting jostled by this sudden tsunami of forgotten memories.
EDIT: Digging around on Wayback Machine (obviously NSFW, for the curious), apparently it was actually still around until somewhere between 2018 and '19 when it finally died. The snapshots from around 2007 are peak Web 1.5 design with stuff like affiliate buttons and table layouts. Man I miss that era.
You have some awesome cells, thanks for sharing them online.
Had completely forgotten about Robot Carnival and neat to see you have a few pieces from some of the shorts(episodes?)
Also the resources->galleries was useful, found some new but actually old sites to check out.
I love RC and many of my wishlist items are from it. I regret I was relatively late into collecting it. Glad you appreciate the old galleries, many are internet relics which I love.
Yahoo Auctions is more popular over there and proxy services (I use Buyee) make it pretty simple bid/buy and not too much more expensive if you wait for their (Buyee) coupons.
If you can set up your own domain why would you need someone that specializes in a super limited non technical frontend for customizing prebuilt web templates?
In hindsight I didn’t need him. I am pretty technical but I couldn’t figure out what happened so I hired some squarespace seo guy to make sure I had everything configured properly. It was the first and only time I heard of this happening.
Employees are not robots. They are human beings. Sometimes human beings have human problems that need the assistance of other humans. This makes humans happier and more productive.
It's depressing to think that there are people who actually believe that optimal use of work resources is even worth calling out as an issue. In 2024.
If you want your employees able to deal with emergencies, you can't run them at 100% capacity all the time. You need some slack, so you have capacity when shit hits the fan.
Using a small amount of that slack to keep another employee happy can be a good investment. In addition, it's good for someone like the CISO to poke around the innards of your network (etc) configs from time to time, just to stay up to date with what's going on in the company and to perhaps flag anything that smells suspicious.
You can do these kinds of exploration exercises completely free form, or you can take a little task like 'figure out exactly why this specific site is blocked' as a token of motivation.
I agree that all of this mostly only makes sense, if it doesn't take too much time.
Though if this specific task would take a lot of time, that would also indicate that either the CISO needs to upskill, or the network config is too complicated. In either case, that would be a valuable insight.
> Wait, so you begged your CISO to figure out why your work internet ecosystem was blocking your personal project website from work computers? Man that sounds like a horrible waste of the CISOs time and not what work resources are for.
Sticking to your strict productivity line of thought, this kind of ask would:
1) be a great small teaching task for an intern, and
2) build goodwill elsewhere in a company, something good CISOs won't pass up an opportunity to do when the cost is relatively cheap.
But it's also likely that the CISO just wanted to help.
I purchased a valuable premium domain to host a personal art collection (of anime cels). For some bizarre reason, the site was inaccessible from my work computer and it was de-listed from Google even if I typed the url itself into search.
I hired a square space specialist to figure out why, to no avail. I then begged our company’s CISO to investigate and it turns out we had some firewall setting on UniFi that blocked the domain because it appeared on a list. Once I checked way back, it turns out that it was as an anime porn aggregator years back. I personally reached out to all the web filters out there (Google, Symantec, bing) and one by one filed tickets for them to mark it as art instead of pornography and it worked. I am now properly crawled on Google but still MIA on Bing, search console is giving me some BS error that’s incomprehensible, typical of MSFT.