The only problem with that or anything similar, is that unless you go to quite 
a lot of work to just download rather than install the PEM file, and convert it 
into something human readable WITHOUT installing it, and investigate every 
certificate in there, you're trusting that the site you got it from is not only 
legit, but is secure and hasn't been hacked to alter the file to provide some 
very bogus certificates that could work together with some sort DNS spoofing to 
get you to feed sensitive information (ie bank passwords, etc) via an untrusted 
site that would capture it.

> On Jan 3, 2022, at 13:30, m9411 <m9...@abc.se> wrote:
> 
> Have been testing this with good results on 10.4 ... 10.11 :
> 
> http://logi.wiki/index.php/Update_Certificates_in_Older_macOS 
> <http://logi.wiki/index.php/Update_Certificates_in_Older_macOS>
> 
> Rgds,
> /Bjarne.
> 
> -- 
> 
>> 3 jan. 2022 kl. 19:20 skrev Riccardo Mottola via macports-users 
>> <macports-users@lists.macports.org 
>> <mailto:macports-users@lists.macports.org>>:
>> 
>> Hi,
>> 
>> how to react best for Let's Encrypt expiration?
>> 
>> I have read here some suggestions, is there a recommended, proven way?
>> 
>> I have MacOS 10.5, 10.6, 10.7 but nothing newer, so I suppose the route of 
>> "getting it from a newer macOS" is no way for me (if something doesn't share 
>> it with me).
>> 
>> Other proven ways?
>> 
>> 
>> Thank you,
>> 
>> Riccardo
> 

-- 
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