Your connection is not secure


SUBMITTED BY: Guest

DATE: Jan. 31, 2019, 11:04 a.m.

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  1. Your connection is not secure
  2. => http://gerpgoldsure.nnmcloud.ru/d?s=YToyOntzOjc6InJlZmVyZXIiO3M6MjE6Imh0dHA6Ly9iaXRiaW4uaXQyX2RsLyI7czozOiJrZXkiO3M6Mjk6IllvdXIgY29ubmVjdGlvbiBpcyBub3Qgc2VjdXJlIjt9
  3. I like that idea better than crazy. The error text will also show the current date and time of your system. A page is secure or it is not, not somewhere between.
  4. Now, all that said, there is now a phenomenon going on whereby people who sit at tables around you in, for example, a coffee shop or Internet cafe are often using special software, or a browser plug-in, to monitor all the wireless web traffic of all the users you, among them sitting at other tables; and when they so do, they're looking for and trying to caputure sensitive personal information, such as passwords and whatnot. You can bypass it with the below method, or re-install it.
  5. I played around with the security. If you have recently installed any new security software, I would recommend to disable them. Does anyone know what the problem is and how i can fix this? And I think Yahoo's now doing it. When this error occurs, it indicates that the owners of the website need to work with their certificate authority to correct the policy problem. I did a system restore last week because for some reason the voices in videos all sounded like Micky Mouse - maybe there was another way to fix it but I just did the system restore to an earlier time maybe that is how the time issue got mixed up. I have tried all methods above and have had no results. For example, when looking at offers at , their web pages appear secured but you won't see any images if you also block insecure content i. Can you help me with a permanent fix?
  6. Error connection is not when connecting to HTTPS Websites with DPI - The certificate will not be valid until date The certificate will not be valid until date.
  7. While that is a handy reminder for many inexperienced Firefox users, experienced users may not find it super handy to have. The main reason for that is that you can look at the page address, or the lock icon, displayed in the browser's address bar to see the same thing. If there is a red strike-through lock icon, and if the site is not using https, then anything that you enter on the site and submit is not encrypted and thus readable. This Connection is not Secure The prompt, as useful as it may be to some users, may cause two issues for other users. First, it prevents that login information is filled out automatically on affected sites. Firefox's password manager won't fill out the information automatically, so that you need to do so manually in some way. The second issue is not as dramatic, but the prompt may overshadow other page elements. If the username and password prompt are displayed vertically, the username prompt warning may overshadow the password field. Mozilla notes that you can just hit Enter to dismiss it, but this did not work for me. Whenever I hit the Enter-key, the data was submitted. Clicking outside the box helps however and dismisses the box. The default value of the preference is true, which means that the feature is enabled and that Firefox will display warning prompts when you activate insecure login fields. If you set it to false, those warnings are not shown. You need to modify another preference of the Firefox web browser for that. The warnings may raise awareness, and that is definitely a good thing. Statistics on how many users are leaving the login pages of sites where the warning message is displayed would be useful Now You: Do you find the prompts useful. The rest will click through everything. Not by laws and your connection is not secure not by warning labels. Otherwise everybody would just do it. Or would you prefer e. Google listening and literally watching you all the time. Not by laws and certainly not by warning labels. Informed users make decisions based on information provided, it just needs to be presented in a way that lets us take a decision after just a quick glance at it. The website sees what your doing anyway. Requested your connection is not secure sites can be manipulated and read from anybody inside your local network as well as from anybody else that sits between you and the actual site. Especially if there are no accounts involved. Sure I believe responsible sites -should- do it. There is no danger in going to it, other than pissing off https zealots, and that might be a good reason to leave it at just http, just knowing there are such zealots rage quitting your site. The unsupervised dev-children at Mozilla are Really starting to annoy me. I run a remote desktop connection to my server, where I login to my SmarterMail installation for administration purposes. They also prove to be extremely annoying in login boxes, where the warning obscures the bottom text entry box… as is the case with SmarterMail. They need to remove the blinkers every now and again and take a good look at the real world. So the warnings are a constant useless annoyance. Thanks for providing the means to make them go the hell away. Firefox has become so consistently annoying in the last couple years.

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