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Jan 6 at 19:43 answer added baptx timeline score: 0
Mar 7, 2022 at 18:10 answer added oreojack timeline score: 5
Nov 28, 2021 at 7:05 history bumped CommunityBot This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
Jul 27, 2021 at 23:02 history bumped CommunityBot This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
Jul 13, 2020 at 12:05 answer added Robert timeline score: 0
Jul 13, 2020 at 11:54 comment added Robert Have you tried to install your custom root CA certificate inside Firefox as proposed here (ist's from 2016, not sure if this is still working)? support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1140625#answer-921174
Jul 13, 2020 at 11:52 history edited Robert
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Jul 13, 2020 at 11:38 history migrated from superuser.com (revisions)
Jul 2, 2020 at 18:33 comment added Unencoded Yes I doubted it would be so simple, you have certainly done your research! All I can think of is looking at Android apps that may help you debug why the certificate isn't trusted - perhaps play.google.com/store/apps/…
Jul 2, 2020 at 18:23 comment added woodz @Unencoded: to your questions, yes I did. Tried also for WiFi but this results in nothing listed under trusted certificates "user" tap and in the trusted credentials. So this way has zero relevance. I'll give it another try
Jul 2, 2020 at 18:16 comment added Unencoded For reference, I have an Android 10 phone with a user trusted CA certificate installed and am able to access internal sites with CA issued certificates without a problem, using all but Firefox (which uses it's own CA list, not the phone's). I'm afraid I can't think of anything that would cause this problem on specifically a phone when desktops work fine though. Browsers tested on my phone were Chrome and Edge. Presumably you installed for "VPN and Apps" and rebooted your device?
Jul 1, 2020 at 20:31 comment added woodz @Pedro: yes seems so and I got a valuable resource which manifests the assumption. I'll edit my question
Jul 1, 2020 at 12:39 comment added Pedro I recall a similar issue, whereby the system managed certificate store differs from the user managed certificate store. You'd need to root the device to modify the system cert store, otherwise you can't get your root CA in. There's also the possibility that you'd need to explicitly trust the certificate like you need to on iOS. But I haven't done any of this in a while so wouldn't know the details.
Jun 30, 2020 at 15:53 history asked woodz CC BY-SA 4.0