It was explained that GnuCash does not use an officially signed certificate
(it isn't worth the time or cost involved); it uses a self-signed
certificate, but this is viewed as suspicious by tools that are supposed to
be protecting you/your computer.

It's nothing that GnuCash has changed; the supposed "protection" is either
recently installed, or had a recent update that made it more picky.

Whitelisting is always good for products or websites that you KNOW you can
trust.



On Fri, Jan 16, 2026 at 7:55 AM barrym via gnucash-user <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Could I ask a  very simple question? What is the reason why GNUCash is
> not (now) 'approved' for downloading and installing on W11, it was for
> all the other versions I have had for years ??
>
> Is whitelisting something that I should be aware of, to download an
> accounting app?
>
> Barry
>
-- 
_________________________________
Richard Losey
[email protected]
Micah 6:8
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