It happens when the targeted service is hosted on a different domain or port.
Web browsers will not allow to fetch information from a different site without explicit permissions (the targeted service
must include a special `Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *` HTTP headers).
-If this happens your web console (`ctrl+shit+i` or `F12`) will be filled with this kind of errors:
+If this happens your web console (`ctrl+shift+i` or `F12`) will be filled with this kind of errors:
```text
Access to fetch at 'https://<target-service>' from origin 'https://<homer>' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. If an opaque response serves your needs, set the request's mode to 'no-cors' to fetch the resource with CORS disabled.
To resolve this, you can either:
* Host all your target service under the same domain & port.
-* Modify the target sever configuration so that the response of the server included following header- `Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *` (<https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS#simple_requests>). It might be an option in the targeted service, otherwise depending on how the service is hosted, the proxy or web server can seamlessly add it.
-* Use a cors proxy sever like [`cors-container`](https://github.com/imjacobclark/cors-container), [`cors-anywhere`](https://github.com/Rob--W/cors-anywhere) or many others.
+* Modify the target server configuration so that the response of the server included following header- `Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *` (<https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS#simple_requests>). It might be an option in the targeted service, otherwise depending on how the service is hosted, the proxy or web server can seamlessly add it.
+* Use a cors proxy server like [`cors-container`](https://github.com/imjacobclark/cors-container), [`cors-anywhere`](https://github.com/Rob--W/cors-anywhere) or many others.