On Fri, 2008-08-22 at 21:04 +0200, Kai Engert wrote:
> 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
I've already added an exception for
https://koji.fedoraproject.org/ both
in epiphany and firefox (I trust the fedora issued certificates),
however this pages seems rather like my certificate is not being
recognized by koji as signed by "known CA authority"...
Martin
Did you remove the old user certificate from your browser?
and make sure you import the new one.
Dennis