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  • Thread Starter blaircomm

    (@blaircomm)

    This is the site: https://blaircomm.us

    Hey blaircomm,

    Thanks for reaching out! I’d like to dig in a bit more to see what’s going on here. Could you reply with:

    • Details about the specific distro that the server making the request is using, and
    • Information regarding if you have the GTE_CyberTrust_Global_Root.crt installed in your certificate folder.

    With this information, I’ll be able to take a better look at things and help get to the bottom of this. Looking forward to your reply!

    Thanks,
    Garnet

    Thread Starter blaircomm

    (@blaircomm)

    Distro: CentOS Linux 7.2.1511 (Core)

    I see no “Global_Root…,” but I could be missing finding it because I don’t know what the code looks like. I have all the required SSL Cert components. Here is a similar issue:

    https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=787705

    Let me know what you find, and I’ll query the host and SSL issuer if nece3ssary.

    Thanks.

    – Michael

    Thanks so much for that info, Michael.

    That link you sent over touches on this as well, but essentially in one of the recent releases of Debian, they have removed the above mentioned certificate, citing potential security concerns in the future. While the future of SSL certs will include moving away from these SHA1 certificates, the industry is not yet ready to fully replace these certificates. For this reason, the most recent release of Ubuntu reverted to include this certificate.

    In order to prevent this error, we would recommend re-adding the certificate above to the certificates folder and then re-attempting to connect. If you are still seeing this error after adding that cert, please don’t hesitate to reach back out and we’ll be glad to continue to investigate. Let me know how it goes!

    Garnet

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
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