I should have clarified my self here, I usually get that from something
that I
know is OK (NOT A BANK) if it were a bank I would run the other way. I did
get one from BofA one day, the web page was legit, they had messed up
something. I called them, they told me yes, to wait a bit that they were
working
on it.

On Mon, Mar 13, 2017 at 10:44 AM, Michael Rasmussen <[email protected]>
wrote:

> On 2017-03-08 07:05, Chuck Hast wrote:
>
> > Usually when I get that error with Chrome/Chromium, I go down to the
> > advanced
> > button and hit that, then you should get a button that tells it to
> > accept
> > the cert
>
> Doing so with a financial institution is extremely ill advised.
> I was tempted to say "financial security suicide."
>
> Banks, brokerages, etc. keep their certs up to date. If an expired cert
> is presented to clients automations are in place to create internal
> trouble tickets and resolve the problem quickly.
>
> Don't accept an invalid SSL cert for a financial institution.
>
>
> --
>        Michael Rasmussen, Portland Oregon
>      Be Appropriate && Follow Your Curiosity
> _______________________________________________
> PLUG mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
>



-- 

Chuck Hast  -- KP4DJT --
Glass, five thousand years of history and getting better.
The only container material that the USDA gives blanket approval on.
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