Sykje yn Support

Mij stipescams. Wy sille jo nea freegje in telefoannûmer te beljen, der in sms nei ta te stjoeren of persoanlike gegevens te dielen. Meld fertochte aktiviteit mei de opsje ‘Misbrûk melde’.

Learn More

Dizze konversaasje is argivearre. Stel in nije fraach as jo help nedich hawwe.

This Connection is Untrusted

  • Gjin antwurden
  • 93 hawwe dit probleem
  • 10 werjeftes
more options

If I use Firefox to go to the website below, I get the "This Connection is Untrusted" exception and even if "Add Exception..." I can see that the intermediate CA's certificate (RapidSSL in this case) is not added to my trusted certificate list. If I use another browser e.g. IE, Opera or chrome, I don't get this issue. I have tried removing the RapidSSL intermediate certificate from IE but going back to the site still works without throwing an exception.

The RootCA that issued the RapidSSL certificate is the "GeoTrust Global CA" which is trusted by both IE and Firefox. If I remove the RapidSSL intermediate CA's certificate in IE and navigate to the site, the even though RapidSSL certificate is NOT automatically downloaded and installed; I do not get an exception raised. Presumably because the Root CA is implicitly trusted. Is this behaviour by design or a bug?

If I use Firefox to go to the website below, I get the "This Connection is Untrusted" exception and even if "Add Exception..." I can see that the intermediate CA's certificate (RapidSSL in this case) is not added to my trusted certificate list. If I use another browser e.g. IE, Opera or chrome, I don't get this issue. I have tried removing the RapidSSL intermediate certificate from IE but going back to the site still works without throwing an exception. The RootCA that issued the RapidSSL certificate is the "GeoTrust Global CA" which is trusted by both IE and Firefox. If I remove the RapidSSL intermediate CA's certificate in IE and navigate to the site, the even though RapidSSL certificate is NOT automatically downloaded and installed; I do not get an exception raised. Presumably because the Root CA is implicitly trusted. Is this behaviour by design or a bug?