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What do actively distrusted certificates look like in the certificate manager?

  • 4 Antworten
  • 1 hat dieses Problem
  • 6 Aufrufe
  • Letzte Antwort von cor-el

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In the "Servers" tab, I see a bunch of certificates, including my certificate exceptions, as well as certificates from CNNIC and DigiNotar. From what I've found on the web, these CNNIC and DigiNotar certificates have been actively distrusted by Mozilla. Do such actively distrusted certificates appear in the certificate manager? If so, what do they look like in the UI? If my browser is actively distrusting these certificates, the UI isn't making this immediately obvious.

Thanks!

In the "Servers" tab, I see a bunch of certificates, including my certificate exceptions, as well as certificates from CNNIC and DigiNotar. From what I've found on the web, these CNNIC and DigiNotar certificates have been actively distrusted by Mozilla. Do such actively distrusted certificates appear in the certificate manager? If so, what do they look like in the UI? If my browser is actively distrusting these certificates, the UI isn't making this immediately obvious. Thanks!

Alle Antworten (4)

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Hello!

The only "safe" certificate should be CNNIC. Diginotar was removed from Firefox if you would like to read about it please take a look at this link: https://blog.mozilla.org/security/2011/09/02/diginotar-removal-follow-up/ This was removed in 2011 so it has been quite a long time. Be sure to remove Diginotar however CNNIC is safe.

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The CNNIC certificate I am seeing is one for MCSHOLDING, an intermediate CA that has been actively distrusted: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Projects/NSS/NSS_3.18.1_release_notes#Notable_Changes_in_NSS_3.18.1

Thanks for the response, but I'm still wondering what distrusted certificates look like in the certificate manager UI, if they show up at all.

Geändert am von liujed

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Hello again!


I have the certificate personally. However if you feel this is a security concern or even a privacy concern. You can always "Delete or distrust" the certificate.

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If you or Mozilla disables built-in root certificates then their trust bits are removed, so they can no longer be used as a trusted root certificate. Such certificates are present as a permanent exception in the Servers tab.