On Sunday, 25 February 2018 13:11:59 GMT Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Your self-signed certificate is not signed by one of those trusted
> authorities, thus ERR_CERT_AUTHORITY_INVALID. If you were using your
> proper public domain name, on this private network, then you might
> already have a
Hi Terry,
> NET::ERR_CERT_AUTHORITY_INVALID
...
> This server could not prove that it is wmt.com; 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.
>
> So is it mis-configuration
The reason for the error is because your certificate is not signed by
one of the trusted Certificate authorities ... indeed the certificate
you have is self signed, it's not signed by any CA.
You could create your own CA ... but anyone using the site will still
get the error unless they
I can send it to the person who asked me to do it, but it could take a
while to hear back, and that person isn't very proficient in computers
at all, so useful feedback will likely be rare.
On 25.02.2018 13:31, Hamish MB wrote:
Interesting idea using wine. I don't know if that would work but
Interesting idea using wine. I don't know if that would work but worth a try.
I've used py2app before for macOS packaging and its mostly good, if a little
buggy at times. Would you have a Windows system to test it on?
Hamish
On 25 Feb 2018, at 12:19, Maqjor Mrx
On Sunday, 25 February 2018 08:04:49 GMT Terry Coles wrote:
> > You can trying listening on TCP port 443 and seeing if Android 7 will
> > play along with your self-signed certificates. Perhaps it will as far
> > as thinking it's got to the Internet, but that Java source I referenced
> > also
Greetings all, Rafi here,
Lately I've been asked to code a script for someone using Windows. I'm
using Python and don't have a Windows system myself, but would like to
be able to give them a standalone .exe file.
I've been looking into things like Py2exe and Pyinstaller, but they all
On Saturday, 24 February 2018 23:40:56 GMT Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> It should be packets 12 and 13; you could run the tcpdump command and
> compare it to Wireshark's display. /etc/services says https is TCP port
> 443.
I have now received a response to my question about where https is used from
8 matches
Mail list logo