When the certificate was self signed, was it signed with a self created CA?
if so, you can install the CA you created as an authority in IE. That way
any certificate signed by that CA cert will be treated as if it was signed
by someone like Verisign. I hope that makes some sense. I can try and
elaborate a little more if it does not.

As for the AS3 bit, I doubt very much that there would be a way.

Christian.

On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 6:15 AM, Anthony Ettinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>   I have an app that I need to access a crossdomain via
> https://192.168.x.x
>
> The problem is that domain has a self-signed cert for the domain
> 'localdomain', and it always throws a warning in IE7 (even if I add it
> to my trusted sites list and install the certificate). The URL I'm
> trying to access is also behind a basic authentication rule
> (base64)...but getting passed this IE7-specific warning is giving me
> problems.
>
> Does anyone have any tricks for forcing acceptance of a bad IE7
> certificate via ActionScript 3.0?
> In Firefox, the request simply pops up a dialog box for the basic
> authentication.
>
> --
> Anthony Ettinger
> 408-656-2473
> http://anthony.ettinger.name
>  
>



-- 

"Every child has many wishes. Some include a wallet, two chicks and a cigar,
but that's another story."

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