I assume what's going on here is your ISP is intercepting requests for domains that don't exist, and redirecting them to a search page. This sounds like a good thing, but it breaks numerous Internet protocols that assume if a domain doesn't exist they'll get an error, not a web page from your ISP trying to be helpful.
To test this, try going to www.quzuzuzuz.com. I just checked, and that website does not actually exist. You should receive an error from your browser that the server can't be found, the connection failed, etc. I'm assuming what you'll get instead is a search page from Frontier showing search results for quzuzuzuz.com. Obviously nothing on that page will be relevant to anything you're trying to do.
If this is the case, then to get away from this, you'll need to change the DNS servers your computer uses to look up domain names. What's happening is that Frontier is seeing that a domain is invalid, but instead of just telling your computer that, it's returning a valid IP address, which makes your computer think it's going to get what you asked for. How you change your DNS servers depends on how your computer is connected to the Internet. If you have your own router, the DNS settings are in that router. If Frontier provided your router, you may or may not be able to change those settings there. You also may or may not be able to change those settings on your computer, but how depends on the operating system.