So i went to holidays in austria and all was working before. Than i came back to my lovely germany, started my Pc and boom I got adware from i dont know where.
So I easy used adwCleaner + Eset Scan to delete Adware and other stuff. So now it's all clean I guess because adwcleaner and eset doesnt find things.
Now the problem is, that Eset blocks SSL Certificates from example Netflix. I have to Clear my SSL Cache or re-enable SSL/TSL in Eset.
After a restart netflix and other websites are working. After another restart I have to do all again.
Another problem is reCaptcha. I can't see reCaptcha anymore. So I can't register myself on other websites. I guess i'ts a problem from ESET too because it doesn't matter which Browser I use (tested with Edge, Chrome and Main Browser Opera).
This server could not prove that it is netflix.com; its security certificate is not trusted by your computer's operating system. This may be caused by a misconfiguration or an attacker intercepting your connection.
As noted by the below IE11 screen shot, I have no issues accessing the Netflix web site on Win 10 using Smart Security ver. 10.1.219. Also of note is Eset's SSL protocol scanning excludes this web site from scanning as evidenced in the screen shot; it is not using the Eset certificate for validation purposes.
I suspect that their may be some type of corruption in your Windows root certificate store or worse, there is man-in-the-middle activity occurring on your PC. One way this can be done is if malware installed a hidden proxy server on your PC.
You have been prevented from accessing an untrusted website. One or more certificates from this site are invalid, so we cannot guarantee its authenticity. This occurs when the site owner has not updated the certificate on time or if it is a fake site created by fraudsters. Visiting a site like this makes you more vulnerable to attacks.
I do have a question, when it's like that, what is exactly the risk? Is it because they're at risk of having been hacked and someone could get my information if i input anything there? They're a legit store, even though their website isn't safe right now, i could open it a few weeks ago. A few other websites that also sell dolls like that are also having the same issue in which their website doesn't seem to be safe even though they're legit
I'm trying to figure out how i ended up with a custom... does it mean my original win10 was a custom too, since i bought an MSI laptop with it? I think it makes sense because when i factory reset my windows it still comes with the MSI software - which i like and is useful to me
Update: Talked to support, they told me to check on Kaspersky "do not scan encrypted connections" and try to load the website again, i was still having problems (chrome blocked from opening the website without option to enter anyway), so the support told me it's probably my network that's blocking. I decided to leave it as is, there wasn't anything else i could do.
2. Many! Today I found more and my brother also mentioned he is, but he doesn't have kaspersky so I'm more certain now it's our internet provider. I can list a couple more that I tried recently and don't work (besides the original one on my 1st post):
www . dollpamm. net/index.php This one wasn't working, I contacted the owner, they contacted their hosting company and the answer was 'Depending on the security options of your browser (Edge, Chrome, etc.), you may receive a warning message or access restrictions.'. But now it's working, somehow. I didn't contact my internet provider yet.
5. I can let them know, but now it's loading and i have no idea why (now it loads with the warning in the corner saying it isnt secure, but at least it loads - the others, when i try to bypass the warning on the screen, never load and gives me errors)
I have the same issue; I was on my site yesterday and cannot get on today. I have tried Chrome and Edge, and both have the same message. My secure link begins with I need to get on this site. Also, this is not the only website I am having issues with suddenly.
New user of Fortigate hardware here, so we are just trying to set this thing up right now. Have it attached to a standalone workstation with no web access (because we are going to replace our current gateway/router with this one)
I have it configured to replace our current gateway/router, but I can only connect it to the network temporarily (replacing the existing one) for testing since it is NOT the gateway yet. When I plug it in, I go to my workstation and test connectivity. Email works, RDP works and many websites open with no issue. However Amazon and Facebook (for example) do not. I can't tell the exact error I get right now because I can't do the swap during the middle of the day.
I have not installed ANY software along with this firewall and do not have "Fortinet" installed or otherwise present to my knowledge. And this would make no sense if other websites display with no issues.
The error means the same - your browser doesn't trust the CA which signed the ssl certificate. The first thing you should check is what is the issuer of the presented certificate. In chrome and all browsers is similar, simply click the padlock in the address bar, look for certificate "issuer".
If you see Fortinet as issuer, that means fortigate is re-signing the certificate and acts as man-in-the-middle. May be you have deep-inspection profile applied or fortigate is trying to re-direct you to authentication page or deliver some replacement message which requires traffic decryption, there might be many reasons depends on your configuration.
Typically webfilter would not allow traffic through by default if the license had expired on it. You can verify the license using "get webfilter status".Even though ICMP allowed web traffic may not allowed.
The Fortinet Security Fabric brings together the concepts of convergence and consolidation to provide comprehensive cybersecurity protection for all users, devices, and applications and across all network edges.
Yes, Netgear's SSL certificate situation is a mess. Many years ago, Netgear managed to register an SSL certificate that covered a bunch of URL's, including routerlogin.com, routerlogin.net, orbilogin.com, orbilogin.net.. (and some more). In August 2019, that SSL certificate expired and was not renewed. There has never been an explanation. Some think that Netgear simply forgot to renew it. Others think that the certificate authority refused to renew it for some reason. (Perhaps other router manufacturers claimed it was unfair for Netgear to 'own' routerlogin.com. Perhaps they realized that all those 1,000's of web sites claiming to be routerlogin.com are not really Netgear. Late in 2019 Netgear released new firmware which included a self-signed SSL certifiate.
The goofy part is that the router never sends the URL routerlogin.com (orbilogin.net, etc.) to a DNS server to be resolved. (Which IP would a DNS authority say it points to?) The router intercepts the DNS request and says, "that is ME". And, the SSL certificate doesn't matter because the router web management is not a secure web site. (It is http, not https)
All was good until web browsers decided to prioritize secure web sites over plain web sites. Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera, Safari... all of them decided to first look for a secure web site before looking for what the user typed in. So, if the user wants to open , the browser first looks for https://ford.com. If that URL exists, the browser opens it. If not, then it tries the insecure web site.
For some reason, when your devices try to open web sites, there is an error that causes the web browser to be redirected to the Orbi web management system. The browser tries to open 192.168.1.1 as a secure web site and receives that self-signed SSL certificate. But browsers do not trust self-signed SSL certificates, so the browser says, "ALERT ALERT UNSAFE GO BACK GO BACK"
There is usually a tiny link somewhere on the page that allows the user to tell the browser, "yes, I know it is unsafe, but I want to go there anyway. Just open the web page." Can you try that and report what comes up?
Now I wish that I had the authority to be an admin for google.com but I don't. So I put in my orbi username/pwd on a lark and it took me to the orbi page rather than the url that it showed it was trying to resolve.
For some reason, some series of reboots / time / it knowing that it was about to be thrown away has caused this to not be an issue currently, but I am worried about it returning and I don't have any idea what I did / didn't do to fix it.
(just personally....) I find this situation very confusing for the user. The web browser appears to be confused and now is trying to load two web pages: (1) the original target URL, and (2) some page on the Orbi administrative web site. Orbi requires a login for access, so the browser pops that up. What a mess!
90f70e40cf