I've recently been visiting a site and, as usual, the various browsers I use provide various different user experiences. The site is coded poorly, but I like it anyway as a resource. The in-site search engine has GET vs. POST errors. There are also errors in images that are, judging by the nomenclature, generated by request, which probably wastes a ton of electricity and processor power. When you use a site and drive up traffic or introduce "strange" traffic, sometimes the webmaster's response is to blacklist you thinking you're part of a botnet or something. Sometimes they blacklist the UA string. I simply change the UA string and everything works again (usually), which is the reason for the title. In my experience, this is most often employed by news sites, The reason? Their sites are perfect for TUI/JS-less consumption and that's somewhat antithetical to online adware. The most ridiculous thing is most of the time they will block off articles that are more than 24 hours old, despite the fact that they are viewable by anyone in that tiny time frame. It's just sad when a legitimate user has to trick and lie just to view content freely available on the Web. Web 1.0 or 1.5 was much better than the current massive dump truck of bytes and dynamic fat code the current Web is.