Oil Prices coverage blocked by on‑site robot check for readers
Readers trying to view recent reporting on oil prices — including headlines about hedge funds, U. S. -Iran talks and volatile sessions — were met with a robot verification page that asks them to click a box before continuing. The page instructs visitors to ensure their browser supports JavaScript and cookies and offers a contact route if the check fails.
Verification page stops access to oil prices headlines
The verification screen presents three explicit instructions: click the box below to confirm you are not a robot, make sure your browser supports JavaScript and cookies, and avoid blocking those elements from loading. Visitors who cannot clear the check are told to contact the site’s support team and provide the reference ID shown on the page.
What the page tells readers and what it asks them to do
The text on the page asks readers to interact directly with the page control — "click the box below" — as the first step. It then makes two technical requests as anchors for troubleshooting: enable JavaScript in the browser and allow cookies. If those steps do not resolve the block, the page instructs readers to reach out to support and include the reference ID displayed on the verification screen.
Subscription prompt and how users proceed
The verification screen also frames a subscription offer, noting that the site’s most important global markets news is available to paying subscribers. For those focused on oil prices who hit the verification wall, the immediate options are clear: complete the checkbox, confirm browser settings for JavaScript and cookies, or contact support with the reference ID noted on the page.
Readers who need to continue to coverage should first try the page interaction and browser adjustments. If the problem persists, use the support contact route and supply the reference ID shown on the verification screen so the team can investigate. The verification page itself lists those exact next steps for restoring access to market stories and headlines.