403 status code indicates that access to the requested resource is denied, even with authentication.
The user is informed that they do not have permission to access the resource.
GET / HTTP/1.1 Host: blc.com Accept: */* User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; [email protected])
<HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>403 Forbidden</TITLE> <BASE href="/error_docs/"><!--[if lte IE 6]></BASE><![endif]--> </HEAD> <BODY> <H1>Forbidden</H1> You do not have permission to access this document. <P> <HR> <ADDRESS> Web Server at gdmig-blc.com </ADDRESS> </BODY> </HTML> <!-- - Unfortunately, Microsoft has added a clever new - "feature" to Internet Explorer. If the text of - an error's message is "too small", specifically - less than 512 bytes, Internet Explorer returns - its own error message. You can turn that off, - but it's pretty tricky to find switch called - "smart error messages". That means, of course, - that short error messages are censored by default. - IIS always returns error messages that are long - enough to make Internet Explorer happy. The - workaround is pretty simple: pad the error - message with a big comment like this to push it - over the five hundred and twelve bytes minimum. - Of course, that's exactly what you're reading - right now. -->