The Diginotar certificate is on the list of accepted certificates in Mozilla 7.0. Is this an oversight or did my update not work as it should have?
I am very confident that Diginotar was removed from the list accepted certificates in my desktop Windows version of Mozilla 6.0.2. However, when I was fooling around in the security options in Mozilla 7.0, I noticed that DigiNotar and DigiNotar B.V. were on the list of accepted certificates. I'm curious whether the updates made by 6.0.1 and 6.0.2 were undone by v. 7.0
Wybrane rozwiązanie
You can click the Edit button on the DigiNotar certificates to verify that all trust bits are unchecked.
That will make it impossible for them to be used as root certificates.
Select a DigiNotar certificate in the Certificate Manager.
- Click the Edit button to verify that all trust bits are unchecked
- Click the View button and go to Details to verify that the certificate has been deactivated (Explicitly Distrust DigiNotar Root CA)
Wszystkie odpowiedzi (2)
Wybrane rozwiązanie
You can click the Edit button on the DigiNotar certificates to verify that all trust bits are unchecked.
That will make it impossible for them to be used as root certificates.
Select a DigiNotar certificate in the Certificate Manager.
- Click the Edit button to verify that all trust bits are unchecked
- Click the View button and go to Details to verify that the certificate has been deactivated (Explicitly Distrust DigiNotar Root CA)
Thanks! I did verify that all the trust bits were unchecked for DigiNotar and Staat der Nederlanden certificates. The Details tab for Staat der Nederlanden did not explicitly state as in the case of DigiNotar that the certificate had been deactivated, but I'm assuming that's not a big deal because all the trust fields are unchecked.