2008/8/22 Kai Engert <kaie@xxxxxxxxxx>: > Parts of the Fedora infrastructure do not use certificates issued by a > CA already trusted by Firefox, but from Fedora's own certificate authority. > > If you decide to trust Fedora to issue certificates that can identify > web sites, you could decide to import that CA cert to your set of > trusted roots. > > You could go to https://admin.fedoraproject.org/fingerprints and install > the CA certificate available from the bottom of that page. > > (Unfortunately the mime type currently is not application/x-x509-ca-cert > so you have to safe that file, and then open it, you might even have to > go to certificate manager and open the authorities tab, then import from > there.) > > You can confirm the origin of the certificate by comparing the > fingerprint presented by Firefox with the one listed on the fingerprints > page (at least you'll know that the fingerprints page and the CA are > controlled by the same people). > > Hope that helps, > Kai Has anyone had any luck importing the revocation list into Firefox? When I choose the import button on the revocation list tab, I do not get a file browser like I do with the other options. I just get a box asking me where the revocation list information is stored, with a text field. I put the absolute pathname in, click OK ... and nothing happens. No error messages. No success either. -- Jerry James http://loganjerry.googlepages.com/ -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list