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Thunderbird Issue - The certificate for 127.0.0.1 does not come from a trusted source.

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I have been using Thunderbird on my Linux laptop (Zorin Pro) for about 7-8 months connected to my proton eMail account via Proton Mail Bridge (and I use Proton VPN as well). After I clicked to install some system updates (on 01 Sep 2025) from the software updater installed on my laptop, I was required to do a restart. After the restart, I brought up my VPN, then connected my Proton Mail Bridge, then Thunderbird (as I have done hundreds of times before). Then I received this error message - The certificate for 127.0.0.1 does not come from a trusted source. On the Thunderbird Support page there is an question posted in June 2025 similar concerning this error message. The reply from this report (from Balazs Mesko) points to the Proton instructions which explain how to initially install. I tried to use these and of course, get an error - Incoming server already exists. So I am still dead in the water - no incoming or outgoing mail possible using Thunderbird. Need help on how to resolve this issue.

I have been using Thunderbird on my Linux laptop (Zorin Pro) for about 7-8 months connected to my proton eMail account via Proton Mail Bridge (and I use Proton VPN as well). After I clicked to install some system updates (on 01 Sep 2025) from the software updater installed on my laptop, I was required to do a restart. After the restart, I brought up my VPN, then connected my Proton Mail Bridge, then Thunderbird (as I have done hundreds of times before). Then I received this error message - The certificate for 127.0.0.1 does not come from a trusted source. On the Thunderbird Support page there is an question posted in June 2025 similar concerning this error message. The reply from this report (from Balazs Mesko) points to the Proton instructions which explain how to initially install. I tried to use these and of course, get an error - Incoming server already exists. So I am still dead in the water - no incoming or outgoing mail possible using Thunderbird. Need help on how to resolve this issue.

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Apparently you already have your account configured. Why would you commence on a reinstall of that account? So lets forget all the information about the previous topic you found as it mostly does not apply to you as you a;ready have an account in Thunderbird.

I do however think you need to contact the proton folks for instructions on how to use their software. 127.0.0.1, also known as "localhost," is a special loopback IP address used by a computer to refer to itself. Network traffic sent to this address is not sent out to the physical network but is instead looped back internally by the operating system. My guess is someone is using encrypted connections on the local device (Proton) and you simply have no legitimate encryption certificate for your computer because you simply do not need one until someone decides you need to use encrypted connections.

You might want to ensure that the bridge is not using SSL, that broken encryption protocol has not been used in Thunderbird for some 10 years. https://proton.me/support/comprehensive-guide-to-bridge-settings you might also need to manually import the encryption certificate as mentioned in that linked document.

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