Ive done that to test it out James, many thanks for that.
Heres some more reading on the subject:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS_cache_poisoningHeres a screenshot to help members find where to enter that command in your posting:
http://www.flowergenie.co.uk/images/startrun.gifTo introduce what this does, heres a laymans description of cached pages.
When you visit a website, browsers make a copy of web pages visited and saves them on your computer, referred to as caching.
If at some time you revisit the web site, the browser looks for the copy it made (the cached page) and displays that, rather than going to the website and downloading the page again.
This presents many problems. If the web site administrator makes a change to the website, you dont get the change. Instead you get a copy of the page as it used to be (from your own computer) - now out of date.
In my case, I post program updates on a web page. A user who visits the product support web site regularly might not see the latest web page status with up to date listing of updates (they sees the cached page from their last visit).
To be sure you are viewing the latest posting, you should refresh the web page.
Heres how. To view the latest state of a web page, you view the web page as normal, then you should click View (a tab on your browsers menu) then Refresh (IE browser) or click View then Reload in Mozilla Firefox.
As you explained to me on the phone James, the command above clears your cached pages.
When you revisit a web site you visited earlier, it forces the lazy browser to go to the website and download the requested page and display that, rather than retrieve a copy of the web page which it cached previously.
Thus, if you have seen a "Reported attack page" when you clicked on a link to visit a website which you know is genuine, and get a suspicious web address instead, then you should run the command as advised by James to clear the cache (the region containing all your cached pages). If not immediately (see James explanation of
time to live) you will at some stage get the proper website.