Certificate Error Web Access Exchange
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the Community! Creating your account only takes a few minutes. Join Now One of our departmental heads brought back a new Win 7x64 laptop we'd given him last week, since he was having issues using OWA to check his e-mail. When outlook web access certificate error exchange 2010 he tried to open it in IE9 (we're avoiding 10 & 11 for the time owa certificate error exchange 2010 being because of legacy support issues), it gives a certificate error, i.e., "There is a problem with this website's security certificate". When I
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try to click on the link for "Continue to this website (not recommended", it won't load anything. I looked at the clock and thought A-HAH! It was off by an hour, since it hadn't updated to take account of
Outlook Web App Certificate Error
DST, but even after changing that it still didn't work. I tried to open the URL in the latest version of Chrome, and that wouldn't work either. He has Firefox installed on the laptop as well, and this did load the site properly. Yes, I know the simple answer would be to use Firefox for this, but there are other users in our organization who are experiencing the same issue, and I don't want to have to exchange owa certificate expired deploy another browser merely to circumvent an issue which should be solvable. This isn't a server-side issues, since other clients can hit OWA without a problem. I've used SSL Checker to check out the certificate, and all's well (as I'd expected). It's a 2048-bit key, so there aren't any problems with the Windows update that forced usage of a 1024-bit key minimum. Options such as changing the publisher's and server certificate revocation, cleaning out the cache, and flushing DNS have proven fruitless, and I'm running out of ideas fast. Has anyone seen a similar issue and, if so, can you recommend a solution? TIA Reply Subscribe View Best Answer RELATED TOPICS: Certificate error for one user Certificate Error Certificate Error   10 Replies Poblano OP SibuLox Mar 12, 2014 at 6:24 UTC We are currently experiencing this with Outlook (2010 and 2013) as well. We have only a handful of users that are actually experiencing the problem out of the whole office. Just started yesterday. I was looking into as a DNS configuration issue but no luck. A hunch thinks it is MS patch that went wrong. For Outlook users they can hit "ok" a few times and things carry on again. Mostly annoying at this point for the user. But it soon will become a issue. I'll let you know if I discovery anything as well. 0 Pobl
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Exchange 2010 Owa Certificate Renewal
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order to access your account. If you are having certificate issues when using http://www.windows-help-central.com/owa-certificate-error.html Outlook Web Access, this next screen will probably look familiar to you: It's your browser complaining about the security certificate on the mail server. What you need to do is click the "continue to this website" link and keep an eye on the area next to your browser's address bar: it will show up in red with certificate error a message "certificate error". You need to click on the certificate error area next to the address bar which will result in this screen showing up: Click the "View certificates" link at the bottom. Windows will then show this certificate information screen: Click the "Install Certificate" button in order to proceed. Note: if you are running certificate error exchange Windows Vista, this button may be disabled. That's because you are not running Internet Explorer in "Administrative mode". Close your Internet Explorer and restart it by right-clicking your Internet Explorer icon and selecting "Run as Administrator". Then repeat the previous steps up to here and continue by clicking on the "Install Certificate" button. That brings up the certificate import wizard: Click next to continue. Again, if you are running Windows Vista, make sure to select the radio button next to "Place all certificates in the following store" and click browse Select the Trusted Root Certification Authorities and click ok (this screen looks a little different in Windows XP, but you'll have to select the Trusted Root Certification Authorities just as well) After clicking the ok button, you'll see this security warning: Confirm that you want to install the certificate. Windows will show you a message that the installation was successful and you need to restart your browser for the changes to take effect. You should now be abl