“For security reasons, framing is not allowed; click OK to remove the frames”: A feature, bug, or...












0















friends . . .



I've been using Chrome for so long, and just recently receive a popup saying "For security reasons, framing is not allowed; click OK to remove the frames" on a number of sites; it shows the loaded page with white bezel-like borders along the edges.



Also, just recently, Chrome starts to behave weirdly, particularly when I open Google Maps: For a brief moment before the page loads, sometimes, it shows a blank page with a "sad document" icon in the middle, with the same white frame "bezel" along the edges like when the "For security reasons . . ." notification comes up.



Both "For security reasons . . ." and Google Maps "sad icon" screenshots are attached.



Please help.



Framing is not allowed
Sad Document Icon










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    Not sure what your question is. This is a feature to prevent malware, or more precisely to prevent others from leaching off the sites reputation by embedding its content in another site.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 4:38











  • @davidgo I was a bit curious if this is normal, or someone is trying to do harmful things on my computer. I've been using Chrome for long, but this thing started to appear just a couple of days ago. I'm not sure if this is a feature added through a Chrome update or someone injected malware into the system and harvests whatever information I type or click on any pages after that. A friend of mine (who we worship as the god of IT here at our office) claimed that maybe someone put a malware that creates a layer over the original page to function as a keylogger, but I can't just believe it.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 5:11











  • When I go to the site, I don't get those messages (but I am using a different platform). I'm not sure your friend is corect, but its not impossible. I do note that the actual site is http, not https, so it is possible to inject stuff into it. Also, when I loaded it without an add blocker, the advertising almost gouged my eyes out, so its entirely possible something was amis.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 5:22











  • @davidgo That's why I'm confused: I never had this kind of problem before, until just recently. I visit mangaka even since 2018, but the "For security reasons" notification appeared around 2 weeks ago as far as I remember. EDIT: Also, about the https thing: I visited www.blastwave-comic.com/, and Chrome says it's not secure (meaning, no https, right?). But there's no "For security reasons" thing.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 6:10


















0















friends . . .



I've been using Chrome for so long, and just recently receive a popup saying "For security reasons, framing is not allowed; click OK to remove the frames" on a number of sites; it shows the loaded page with white bezel-like borders along the edges.



Also, just recently, Chrome starts to behave weirdly, particularly when I open Google Maps: For a brief moment before the page loads, sometimes, it shows a blank page with a "sad document" icon in the middle, with the same white frame "bezel" along the edges like when the "For security reasons . . ." notification comes up.



Both "For security reasons . . ." and Google Maps "sad icon" screenshots are attached.



Please help.



Framing is not allowed
Sad Document Icon










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    Not sure what your question is. This is a feature to prevent malware, or more precisely to prevent others from leaching off the sites reputation by embedding its content in another site.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 4:38











  • @davidgo I was a bit curious if this is normal, or someone is trying to do harmful things on my computer. I've been using Chrome for long, but this thing started to appear just a couple of days ago. I'm not sure if this is a feature added through a Chrome update or someone injected malware into the system and harvests whatever information I type or click on any pages after that. A friend of mine (who we worship as the god of IT here at our office) claimed that maybe someone put a malware that creates a layer over the original page to function as a keylogger, but I can't just believe it.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 5:11











  • When I go to the site, I don't get those messages (but I am using a different platform). I'm not sure your friend is corect, but its not impossible. I do note that the actual site is http, not https, so it is possible to inject stuff into it. Also, when I loaded it without an add blocker, the advertising almost gouged my eyes out, so its entirely possible something was amis.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 5:22











  • @davidgo That's why I'm confused: I never had this kind of problem before, until just recently. I visit mangaka even since 2018, but the "For security reasons" notification appeared around 2 weeks ago as far as I remember. EDIT: Also, about the https thing: I visited www.blastwave-comic.com/, and Chrome says it's not secure (meaning, no https, right?). But there's no "For security reasons" thing.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 6:10
















0












0








0








friends . . .



I've been using Chrome for so long, and just recently receive a popup saying "For security reasons, framing is not allowed; click OK to remove the frames" on a number of sites; it shows the loaded page with white bezel-like borders along the edges.



Also, just recently, Chrome starts to behave weirdly, particularly when I open Google Maps: For a brief moment before the page loads, sometimes, it shows a blank page with a "sad document" icon in the middle, with the same white frame "bezel" along the edges like when the "For security reasons . . ." notification comes up.



Both "For security reasons . . ." and Google Maps "sad icon" screenshots are attached.



Please help.



Framing is not allowed
Sad Document Icon










share|improve this question














friends . . .



I've been using Chrome for so long, and just recently receive a popup saying "For security reasons, framing is not allowed; click OK to remove the frames" on a number of sites; it shows the loaded page with white bezel-like borders along the edges.



Also, just recently, Chrome starts to behave weirdly, particularly when I open Google Maps: For a brief moment before the page loads, sometimes, it shows a blank page with a "sad document" icon in the middle, with the same white frame "bezel" along the edges like when the "For security reasons . . ." notification comes up.



Both "For security reasons . . ." and Google Maps "sad icon" screenshots are attached.



Please help.



Framing is not allowed
Sad Document Icon







google-chrome security malware google-maps frame






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 30 at 4:24









CelestialBeingCelestialBeing

11




11








  • 1





    Not sure what your question is. This is a feature to prevent malware, or more precisely to prevent others from leaching off the sites reputation by embedding its content in another site.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 4:38











  • @davidgo I was a bit curious if this is normal, or someone is trying to do harmful things on my computer. I've been using Chrome for long, but this thing started to appear just a couple of days ago. I'm not sure if this is a feature added through a Chrome update or someone injected malware into the system and harvests whatever information I type or click on any pages after that. A friend of mine (who we worship as the god of IT here at our office) claimed that maybe someone put a malware that creates a layer over the original page to function as a keylogger, but I can't just believe it.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 5:11











  • When I go to the site, I don't get those messages (but I am using a different platform). I'm not sure your friend is corect, but its not impossible. I do note that the actual site is http, not https, so it is possible to inject stuff into it. Also, when I loaded it without an add blocker, the advertising almost gouged my eyes out, so its entirely possible something was amis.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 5:22











  • @davidgo That's why I'm confused: I never had this kind of problem before, until just recently. I visit mangaka even since 2018, but the "For security reasons" notification appeared around 2 weeks ago as far as I remember. EDIT: Also, about the https thing: I visited www.blastwave-comic.com/, and Chrome says it's not secure (meaning, no https, right?). But there's no "For security reasons" thing.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 6:10
















  • 1





    Not sure what your question is. This is a feature to prevent malware, or more precisely to prevent others from leaching off the sites reputation by embedding its content in another site.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 4:38











  • @davidgo I was a bit curious if this is normal, or someone is trying to do harmful things on my computer. I've been using Chrome for long, but this thing started to appear just a couple of days ago. I'm not sure if this is a feature added through a Chrome update or someone injected malware into the system and harvests whatever information I type or click on any pages after that. A friend of mine (who we worship as the god of IT here at our office) claimed that maybe someone put a malware that creates a layer over the original page to function as a keylogger, but I can't just believe it.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 5:11











  • When I go to the site, I don't get those messages (but I am using a different platform). I'm not sure your friend is corect, but its not impossible. I do note that the actual site is http, not https, so it is possible to inject stuff into it. Also, when I loaded it without an add blocker, the advertising almost gouged my eyes out, so its entirely possible something was amis.

    – davidgo
    Jan 30 at 5:22











  • @davidgo That's why I'm confused: I never had this kind of problem before, until just recently. I visit mangaka even since 2018, but the "For security reasons" notification appeared around 2 weeks ago as far as I remember. EDIT: Also, about the https thing: I visited www.blastwave-comic.com/, and Chrome says it's not secure (meaning, no https, right?). But there's no "For security reasons" thing.

    – CelestialBeing
    Jan 30 at 6:10










1




1





Not sure what your question is. This is a feature to prevent malware, or more precisely to prevent others from leaching off the sites reputation by embedding its content in another site.

– davidgo
Jan 30 at 4:38





Not sure what your question is. This is a feature to prevent malware, or more precisely to prevent others from leaching off the sites reputation by embedding its content in another site.

– davidgo
Jan 30 at 4:38













@davidgo I was a bit curious if this is normal, or someone is trying to do harmful things on my computer. I've been using Chrome for long, but this thing started to appear just a couple of days ago. I'm not sure if this is a feature added through a Chrome update or someone injected malware into the system and harvests whatever information I type or click on any pages after that. A friend of mine (who we worship as the god of IT here at our office) claimed that maybe someone put a malware that creates a layer over the original page to function as a keylogger, but I can't just believe it.

– CelestialBeing
Jan 30 at 5:11





@davidgo I was a bit curious if this is normal, or someone is trying to do harmful things on my computer. I've been using Chrome for long, but this thing started to appear just a couple of days ago. I'm not sure if this is a feature added through a Chrome update or someone injected malware into the system and harvests whatever information I type or click on any pages after that. A friend of mine (who we worship as the god of IT here at our office) claimed that maybe someone put a malware that creates a layer over the original page to function as a keylogger, but I can't just believe it.

– CelestialBeing
Jan 30 at 5:11













When I go to the site, I don't get those messages (but I am using a different platform). I'm not sure your friend is corect, but its not impossible. I do note that the actual site is http, not https, so it is possible to inject stuff into it. Also, when I loaded it without an add blocker, the advertising almost gouged my eyes out, so its entirely possible something was amis.

– davidgo
Jan 30 at 5:22





When I go to the site, I don't get those messages (but I am using a different platform). I'm not sure your friend is corect, but its not impossible. I do note that the actual site is http, not https, so it is possible to inject stuff into it. Also, when I loaded it without an add blocker, the advertising almost gouged my eyes out, so its entirely possible something was amis.

– davidgo
Jan 30 at 5:22













@davidgo That's why I'm confused: I never had this kind of problem before, until just recently. I visit mangaka even since 2018, but the "For security reasons" notification appeared around 2 weeks ago as far as I remember. EDIT: Also, about the https thing: I visited www.blastwave-comic.com/, and Chrome says it's not secure (meaning, no https, right?). But there's no "For security reasons" thing.

– CelestialBeing
Jan 30 at 6:10







@davidgo That's why I'm confused: I never had this kind of problem before, until just recently. I visit mangaka even since 2018, but the "For security reasons" notification appeared around 2 weeks ago as far as I remember. EDIT: Also, about the https thing: I visited www.blastwave-comic.com/, and Chrome says it's not secure (meaning, no https, right?). But there's no "For security reasons" thing.

– CelestialBeing
Jan 30 at 6:10












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