I'm the only employee (that I know of) that's getting this error. 

Do different certificates apply to individual employees?

Just trying to understand how the issue seems to be affecting only me.

Thanks.

-----Original Message-----
From: David Woolley [mailto:for...@david-woolley.me.uk] 
Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2017 9:00 AM
To: Evalee Gress; support@pidgin.im
Subject: Re: Certificate could not be validated

On 18/05/17 13:30, Evalee Gress wrote:
> Could this be due to a Microsoft update?
>
Most unlikely.  A Microsoft update might remove trust for a root certificate, 
but the error you are getting is that the certificate is expired.

> When I asked my IT dept. about this, they said they thought it might be due 
> to a Microsoft update. Is that possible?
>

When it comes to security, IT departments shouldn't be guessing! 
However, if you are using the machine for the companies purposes, you can act 
on their advice to ignore the error, as it is the company's security that is at 
risk, so they have the right to decide when to ignore warnings.

Certificates have a limited life because of similar reasons to those for which 
credit and debit cards get replaced.  The longer a particular certificate is in 
use, the longer the bad guys have to break the encryption.  Also, flaws can be 
found in the methods used, and new certificates allow believed safer methods to 
be used; this has actually happened.

If the company doesn't need security for this application, beyond that which 
applies to the whole network, they should disable encryption, unless the server 
does not allow that.

> Other than that, they didn't know what could be causing the problem.

The problem is very clear.  They have failed to replace the server certificate 
before it expired.  I am definitely concerned that the IT department was unable 
to understand that error.

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