We have a website that uses Classic ASP.
Part of our release process substitutes values in a file and we found a bug in it where it will write the file out as UTF-8.
UTF-8 does not use BOMs; it is an annoying misfeature in some Microsoft software that puts them there. You need to find what step of your release process is putting a UTF-8-encoded BOM in your files and fix it — you should stop that even if you are using UTF-8, which really these days is best.
But I doubt it's IIS causing the display problem. More likely the browser is guessing the charset of the final displayed page, and when it sees bytes that look like they're UTF-8 encoded it guesses the whole page is UTF-8. You should be able to stop it doing that by stating a definitive charset by using an HTTP header:
Content-Type: text/html;charset=iso-8859-1
and/or a meta element in the HTML
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
Now (assuming ISO-8859-1 is actually the character set your data are in) it should display OK. However if your file really does have a UTF-8-encoded BOM at the start, you'll now see that as ‘’ in your page, which is what those bytes look like in ISO-8859-1. So you still need to get rid of that misBOM.
If you using access db you should write
Session.CodePage=65001
Set tabtable= Conn.Execute("SELECT * FROM table")
I was searching on the same exact issue yesterday and came across:
http://blog.inspired.no/utf-8-with-asp-71/
Important part from that page, in case it goes away...
ASP CODE:
Response.ContentType = "text/html"
Response.AddHeader "Content-Type", "text/html;charset=UTF-8"
Response.CodePage = 65001
Response.CharSet = "UTF-8"
and the following HTML META tag:
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
We were using the meta tag and asp CharSet property, yet the page still didn't render correctly. After adding the other three lines to the asp file everything just worked.
Hope this helps!