Other browsers service our old links to a now SSL protected site, why does MF show http/realstreamline.com as unsecure?
Some people say just change browsers but I prefer Firefox on all devices...
We have just changed over 5 websites to SSL certs. Only one needed to be registered with the www.
This one site needed some code work to have old links from before the SSL properly access the site. It works now on other browsers, but after clearing cashe + AND refreshing MF AND restarting computer - MF still says this site is unsecured when access is attempted for example from http://realstreamline.com or similarly to mid site pages.
MF needs to work for this so I am posting a first question to this forum. Thanks for your insight!!
All Replies (4)
realstreamline.com uses an invalid security certificate.
The certificate is only valid for the following names: strategyresourceinternational.com, www.strategyresourceinternational.com, www.realstreamline.com, thestrongcompany.net, gracefulguns.com, purelandsecurity.strategyresourceinternational.com
Error code: <a id="errorCode" title="SSL_ERROR_BAD_CERT_DOMAIN">SSL_ERROR_BAD_CERT_DOMAIN</a>
I've called for more help.
The problem is likely in your Apache config file(s) (e.g., .htaccess). This causes the error:
http://realstreamline.com/ => https://realstreamline.com/
Try changing the order of your URL rewrites/redirects so that this happens first:
http://realstreamline.com/ => http://www.realstreamline.com/
Or maybe you can combine them:
http://realstreamline.com/ => https://www.realstreamline.com/
I was puzzled why it works in Google Chrome, but then I saw this in the console:
Redirecting navigation realstreamline.com -> www.realstreamline.com because the server presented a certificate valid for www.realstreamline.com but not for realstreamline.com. To disable such redirects launch Chrome with the following flag: --force-fieldtrials=SSLCommonNameMismatchHandling/Disabled/
Not sure the Mozilla developers would feel it is safe to redirect to a different host name, but at least it contains the same domain name combined with the most common subdomain, so it's not insane to imagine.
Okulungisiwe