Good news! It looks like I convinced the webmaster to poke at the site
and get some pages allowed on HTTP connections. Please try the page
again and let me know if you have issues with it.
On Aug 23, 3:30 pm, Omnifarious omnifari...@gmail.com wrote:
On Aug 19, 12:41 am, Marc Gravell
Maybe you should move your project to code.google.com? You wouldn't have to
host your SVN on (apparently) your own machine that way.
Anyway, I've added a link to your wiki page.
On Mon, Aug 24, 2009 at 8:09 PM, opticron nyphb...@gmail.com wrote:
Good news! It looks like I convinced the
In any case, I've already spoken with the site maintainer about a
couple of options and the issue is kind of sticky, so I'll update here
if anything relevant happens.
On Aug 19, 2:55 pm, Kenton Varda ken...@google.com wrote:
I get the error in Chrome, Firefox, and even IE (all on Windows), so I
The problem is the root certificate (CA Cert Signing Authority) - it
certainly isn't in my trusted set of root certificates...
On Aug 19, 3:50 am, opticron nyphb...@gmail.com wrote:
It is a CACert certificate that is valid until May of 2010.
On Aug 18, 7:46 pm, Kenton Varda ken...@google.com
What certificate authorities would be acceptable for this purpose? I
see that Chrome has root certs for only verisign and thawte, but
that's still in beta and can hardly be considered a realistic
sampling. The Mozilla project has root certs for MANY more than that.
On Aug 19, 2:41 am, Marc
I get the error in Chrome, Firefox, and even IE (all on Windows), so I don't
think the problem can be blamed on Chrome lacking root certificates.
On Wed, Aug 19, 2009 at 9:03 AM, opticron nyphb...@gmail.com wrote:
What certificate authorities would be acceptable for this purpose? I
see that
I'd like to add this to the list, but I noticed that the wiki page is an
HTTPS link to a site with an invalid SSL certificate. I tried to change the
protocol to just HTTP but the site automatically redirects to HTTPS. Modern
browsers complain very loudly about this, and I feel weird posting a
It is a CACert certificate that is valid until May of 2010.
On Aug 18, 7:46 pm, Kenton Varda ken...@google.com wrote:
I'd like to add this to the list, but I noticed that the wiki page is an
HTTPS link to a site with an invalid SSL certificate. I tried to change the
protocol to just HTTP but