I am trying to browse a website, however, it only works under Windows and Mac because they use the navigator.platform from JavaScript to find out the architecture I am running on. Of course, they also use the browser’s user agent, but that was easy to spoof.
Here is the .js in question: http://pastebin.com/f56fd608d. The code responsible for browser detection is at the top. Is there any way of changing the .js file before the site runs, or something similar, so I can eliminate the check?
Using the JavaScript console yields:
>navigator.platform
Linux i686
Evidently I changed the browser’s user agent, but navigator.platform does not seem to take it’s value from the user agent.
Maybe someone knows how to change the value returned by navigator.platform, because I hate running Windows under VirtualBox to use this site.
EDIT:
This could be of interest because Linux users might be artificially denied access to websites, and can do nothing about it.
Since you can’t directly set
navigator.platform, you will have to be sneaky – create an object that behaves likenavigator, replace itsplatform, then setnavigatorto it.If you execute this code before the document loads (using GreaseMonkey, an addon or a Chrome extension), then the page will see
navigator.platformas"MyOS".Note: tested only in Chrome.