Joseph Young
Involved Inc
System Admin

What I did was add a link/image to the bottom of my web email
interface(squrriel mail) stating that this is a secure page and to click it
for more details. The second page has a link to the certificate and decribes
that the viewer has to install the certificate to stop the popup.


joe





----- Original Message -----
From: "Bill Shupp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, October 04, 2002 9:17 AM
Subject: Re: [toaster] Certificate problems


On Friday, October 4, 2002, at 02:13  AM, Christophe Le Guern wrote:
> I've made a test and the mozilla mail client tells you to accept
> permanently the certificate (I believe but not sure)
> I don't know about outlook.

I haven't tested many clients in a while.. but in the past, some
clients (netscape, mozilla I believe) would allow you to accept the
certificate so you only got the question once.  But other clients
(outlook, I think) I had to deal with the warnings every time.

Some clients, like Apple's Mail for OS X never even bother you about
it.  Which is good and bad, I guess.  Either way, getting it signed by
a trusted authority is the safest way to insure that your clients won't
complain.

Regards,

Bill Shupp


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