A redirection may refer to any of the following:
A redirection describes sending a signal, data, or other information to an alternate location. Some examples of redirection are sending data intended for one drive to another drive or sending a user visiting a web page to another web page.
When referring to something malicious or when your browser or search goes somewhere you don’t want to be, redirecting is known as a hijack.
Related information
- How to transfer a user to a new web page automatically.
- A redirect may also refer to when a command’s output is sent to an alternate output. For example, in the MS-DOS or Windows command line, you could type the following command to redirect the output of the dir command to the “example.txt” text file.
dir > example.txt
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