Sometime Today, R cobbled together some glyphs to say:
ssssssshhhhhhh. This is India they won't appreciate you for detecting flaws in their system, they would sue you instead. :-) Same is the case in US. They won't allow you to tamper with their system unless you are authorized to do so.
Actually, it looks like ICICI Direct made exactly the changes to their website that I'd mailed them a while ago. I'm not entirely sure of what LK did, but they were unwilling to listen to me until he piped up.
What we must do is:
- Lots of people tell them it's broken - Some of these people must be experienced (7+ years) web developers - At least one of the mails must contain a "fixed" version of their website - Some of these experienced web developers needs to tell them how he reduced his expenses by developing standards compliant websites that work across browsers.
This works.