Hello Marek, On Sun, 24 Feb 2008 04:59:28 +0100 GMT (24/02/2008, 10:59 +0700 GMT), Marek Mikus wrote:
>> Old discussion: What if I, as a reponsible adult, want to choose to >> receive/send the mail even though the certificate is expired? MM> how is expiration of certificate related to Your age? In that I don't want to be treated like a child when I decide to accept an expired certificate. MM> If You want to have secured connection, You need correct MM> certificate. If it has expiration date, You must update it it MM> expires. Not I "must". I "should". And if I don't do it, I must live with the consequences. I "must not" be nannied by my email program - especially since other email programs don't nanny the user. They give a pop-up warning and then let the user accept the expired certificate if he so chooses. Please don't treat me like a child, I know what I'm doing. -- Cheers, Thomas. Signs Your Co-Worker Is A Hacker: Instead of the "Welcome" voice on AOL, you overhear, "Good Morning, Mr./Mrs. President." http://thomas.fernandez.hat-gar-keine-homepage.de/ Message reply created with The Bat! 4.0.14.5 under Windows XP 5.1 Build 2600 Service Pack 2 ________________________________________________________ Current beta is 4.0.14.4 | 'Using TBBETA' information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html