Before trying to answer, since you mention the hospital environment I'd
like to point something out: even though it's none of my business, I hope
you're not deploying Camlistore in production for professional health data?
I mean, it's one thing to deploy it for friends, so they can store whatever
data they want (and they should have backups of the data anyway of course),
and as long as you feel you can help them if they run into a problem. I
feel we can say that Camlistore's core is pretty sound, but it should not
be trusted yet as a whole product for critical stuff like health data in an
hospital.

That said, I'm not sure I understand what is it you want to do. I assume
you're using Chrome as a browser as well when you're ChromeOS, so why can't
you do the same as you would on another OS? That is, Click on ADVANCED so
you can get past the connection warning? Then again, I've never used
ChromeOS, so I don't really know.

Also, that particular problem should be moot very soon, since I believe
we're ready for the next phase of the deployer, i.e. it will provide you
with a hostname as well, so you'll get a certificate signed for that very
hostname instead of one signed for localhost, as it does now. Actually, I
don't see why we couldn't deploy that version of it now, at least behind an
experimental flag. I'll try to get it done asap, and report back here.

On 18 January 2017 at 02:51, clive boulton <[email protected]> wrote:

> Successfully setup the Camlistore launcher version for a pharmacist and
> nurse couple who have four clients: Chromebook (R55), Android tablet (5.x),
> Android phone (5.x) and Macbook Air (MacOS).  After completing setup of
> the Camlistore Launcher version the success form generates both SHA-1 and
> SHA-256 keys. Visit the external web url https://104.198.190.48/ on
> ChromeOS results in:
>
> “Your connection is not private
>
> Attackers might be trying to steal your information from 104.198.190.48
> (for example, passwords, messages, or credit cards).
>
> NET::ERR_CERT_AUTHORITY_INVALID
>
> Automatically report details of possible security incidents to Google. Privacy
> policy
>
> Back to safety HIDE ADVANCED
>
> This server could not prove that it is 104.198.190.48; its security
> certificate is not trusted by your computer's operating system. This may be
> caused by a misconfiguration or an attacker intercepting your connection. 
> Learn
> more.
>
> Proceed to 104.198.190.48 (unsafe)
>
> Do I input the SHA-256 key to allow an exception to suppress the above
> security message and instead show a green safe https web url? [folks who
> work in hospitals have been drilled to avoid insecure sites due to
> ransom-ware and HIPAA]
>
> I tried adding an exception thru ChromeOS by clicking on the strikes out
> “red lock” before https: on the external web url https://104.198.190.48/
>
> On ChromeOS I tried every option to input https://104.198.190.48/ security
> address without any success, do I need to input the SHA-256 key as browser
> exception certificate?
>
> Following Chrome help is not helpful https://support.google.com/
> chrome/answer/3123708?hl=en
>
> https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/95617?hl=en&ref_topic=3434353
>
> Thanks for help.
>
>
> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dgK_cR8jlnzzqgLwT639HIANSt4NReekNc
> NI6w33xLY/edit
>
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