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Home/ Questions/Q 843379
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T06:07:01+00:00 2026-05-15T06:07:01+00:00

I have a website running on a Windows 2003 server on IIS 6, serving

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I have a website running on a Windows 2003 server on IIS 6, serving pages for a LAN where everybody is working with a domain account. On other machines this works fine, no-one has to login to the website, the dynamic scripts pick-up the account-name from the HTTP request.

Only, when browsing from the server itself (via remote desktop e.g.), Internet Explorer still pops up the domain-login-dialog when navigating to this site. (both the usual URL and http://localhost/). This was no problem on the Windows 2000 server we recently migrated the website from.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T06:07:02+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:07 am

    I had this problem or similar and solved it by:

    • adding http://localhost to list of Intranet sites, via IE > Tools > options > security > Local intranet > Sites > advanced > add http://localhost. (This is necessary if you have IE Enhanced Security installed which assigns all intranet Web sites and all UNC paths that are not explicitly listed in the Local intranet zone to the Internet zone, even localhost or other domains that don’t contain ‘.’ symbol which would normally be considered intranet by default.)

    • also on Security > Local Intranet > see what level of security you’re on, to ensure that logon details are passed through. If it’s Custom then click the Custom Level… button, scroll right to the bottom, under User Authentication > logon > for me it’s ‘Automatic logon only in Intranet zone’, which works.

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