The browser displays these when it can’t make sense of the numbers it is reading.
UTF-8 is self-synchronzising. Unlike other multi-byte character encodings, you always know where you are with UTF-8. If you see a number 192-247, you know you are at the beginning of a multi-byte sequence. If you see 128-191 you know you are in the middle of one. There’s no danger of missing the first number and garbling the rest of the text.
This means that in UTF-8, the sequence 191 followed by 224 will never occur naturally, so the browser doesn’t know what to do with it and displays �� instead.
Use the following in your head tag:
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<meta http-equiv="Content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
See: http://coding.smashingmagazine.com/2012/06/06/all-about-unicode-utf8-character-sets/
utf-8
header? – JKirchartz Oct 18 '12 at 17:32