Why does it happen?
This behavior may occur if an FQDN or IP address contains periods. If an FQDN or IP address contains a period, Internet Explorer identifies the Web site or share as in the Internet zone.
Fix for Normal Internet Explorer's
To work around this behavior, each user must add *.domain.com or the appropriate IP address range to the Local Intranet Sites dialog box:
1. In Internet Explorer, click Tools, and then click Internet Options.
2. On the Security tab, click Local intranet, and then click Sites.
3. Click Advanced, and then type: *.domain.com or an IP address range (for example, 157.54.100-200.*) in the Add this Web site to the zone box, where domain.com is your company and top-level domain names.
4. Click Add, click OK, click OK, and then click OK again to close the Internet Options dialog box.
5. Restart the computer.
This behavior may occur if an FQDN or IP address contains periods. If an FQDN or IP address contains a period, Internet Explorer identifies the Web site or share as in the Internet zone.
Fix for Normal Internet Explorer's
To work around this behavior, each user must add *.domain.com or the appropriate IP address range to the Local Intranet Sites dialog box:
1. In Internet Explorer, click Tools, and then click Internet Options.
2. On the Security tab, click Local intranet, and then click Sites.
3. Click Advanced, and then type: *.domain.com or an IP address range (for example, 157.54.100-200.*) in the Add this Web site to the zone box, where domain.com is your company and top-level domain names.
4. Click Add, click OK, click OK, and then click OK again to close the Internet Options dialog box.
5. Restart the computer.
Tags
Internet Explorer