"Your connection is not private"
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@paulverizzo Did you make sure Service Pack 1 and all updates after that are installed for Windows 7?
If so and things still don't work, see https://forums.opera.com/post/289817 for how to update your certificates.
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paulverizzo last edited by leocg
Update: I couldn't figure out the certificate angle. So, the other day I deleted Opera. Every file, every registry entry. Installed new. Went to import my Firefox data and nothing came up! Went over to Firefox and my data had been gone! It even opened to the new user page!
Fortunately, I have a well functioning Opera on my laptop. I tried Sync and nothing synced. Fortunately I was able to copy and paste the Opera Stable folder. Voila!
Then a few hours of use, "Your connection is not private!" Eff! Eff! Eff!
Firefox doesn't not offer to import from Opera, so I selected "Import from Chrome." Says it did, but it didn't. So, once again I am having to build Firefox back up from scratch.
My long marriage with Opera, on my PC is now ended. I'm sad. I'm pissed.
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paulverizzo last edited by leocg
Update: When I get the "Your connection is not private" page, I found out if I click on "Learn more," there is then an option to proceed. Annoy, but a workaround.
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oddssatisfy last edited by
@paulverizzo said in "Your connection is not private":
Update: When I get the "Your connection is not private" page, I found out if I click on "Learn more," there is then an option to proceed. Annoy, but a workaround.
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paulverizzo last edited by
@oddssatisfy Absolutely nothing to do with my internet provider, which is over the air T-Mobile. This only happens with Opera.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@paulverizzo Most probably your certificates are outdated. What the "your connection is not private" page says the problem is?
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blackbird71 last edited by blackbird71
@paulverizzo Opera (and other chromium browsers) use the Windows certificate store (listing) for looking up https security certificates. If you reinstalled Win7, probably you also installed the original cert store that came with the OS which contains a lot of now-obsolete certs. With an obsolete cert, Opera will be unable to match the cert to that defined by the website handshaking process, so it fails with the error message you've seen. When you bypass the error message as you describe, you tell Opera to ignore the mismatched security cert... while that allows you to then view the site, you risk navigating to malicious websites masquerading as the sites you select.
Firefox uses a cert store brought down from Mozilla's servers instead of Windows' certs, so it won't experience that particular problem.
In any case, With an old and obsolete OS like Win7, you really need to make the effort to update the Windows cert store and assure that the Win7 cert updater will automatically connect to the proper Microsoft site in the future. Win7 may no longer reliably update its cert store after reinstallation of the OS unless you take the effort to make sure the updater is pointed in the right direction.
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paulverizzo last edited by
@leocg said in "Your connection is not private":
@paulverizzo Most probably your certificates are outdated. What the "your connection is not private" page says the problem is?
It doesn't say.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@paulverizzo Can you post a screenshot of the page?
There isn't anything like Help me understand, See more, etc?
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paulverizzo last edited by
@leocg Yes, as I very recently reported, if I click on Help Me Understand, it does give an option to go to the blocked site anyway.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@paulverizzo I didn't say it would have an option to access the site but the reason why you can't access it.
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paulverizzo last edited by
@blackbird71 I've never really understood how certificates work. But I don't have issues with Chrome or Firefox, same computer, same OS.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@paulverizzo When you get the error page, hit ctrl + shift + i to open the developer tools and then look on the Security tab. Maybe it'll show more info about what's wrong. Clicking the badge at the left of the address field might help too.
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blackbird71 last edited by
@paulverizzo said in "Your connection is not private":
@blackbird71 I've never really understood how certificates work. But I don't have issues with Chrome or Firefox, same computer, same OS.
Ok, if Chrome has no cert problems, then an obsolete Win7 cert store is not the cause... all chromium browsers work the same way on this, and both Chrome and Opera are chromium-based browsers.
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paulverizzo last edited by
@blackbird71 Doesn't MS Edge also use Chrome? Did Google make it open source, or do they pay licensing fees? What is so attractive about Chrome? Opera had their own engines for years that were noticeably better the Windows Explorer, for instance.
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blackbird71 last edited by
@paulverizzo said in "Your connection is not private":
@blackbird71 Doesn't MS Edge also use Chrome? Did Google make it open source, or do they pay licensing fees? What is so attractive about Chrome? Opera had their own engines for years that were noticeably better the Windows Explorer, for instance.
Edge now uses a chromium engine, as does Opera - but prior to 2020, Edge instead used proprietary Microsoft engines. Google Chrome also uses a chromium engine, but it adds proprietary functionality to it.
"Chromium" refers to both a specific web browser and the open-source code first developed by Google for Chrome in 2008 but which has since been maintained and increasingly altered by the Chromium Project with inputs from Google and others. 'Chromium' is a web browser simply compiled from current chromium source code; 'Chrome' is a web browser with Google's proprietary alterations of chromium code; 'Edge', 'Opera', 'Vivaldi', 'Brave', etc are chromium-based browsers that each apply their own added code on top of the chromium codebase to insert their own features. In most cases, where the chromium code has limits or architectural constaints, those will also be seen in the various browsers - hence one can indeed refer to them all as a single class: chromium-based.
The history of web browsers and the great "browser wars" is fascinating (to some) and far too long to fully go into here. The bottom line is that once upon a time, there were differing ideas on how a browser should best render a website's coded information on a computer screen... hence differing browser designs appeared over time, not always compatible with one another. Websites began to have to include different code modules for different browsers or risk not showing up properly on various screens. But code costs money to write, test, and maintain; so websites began to limit the browser brands with which they were fully compatible. Eventually, attrition (or Google's bottomless resources) led to most code engines falling into disfavor and browsers had to either adopt a more common approach (which turned out to be chromium) or continue spending great resources maintaining their own proprietary engines. Opera originally had its own proprietary Presto engine, but felt the economic need to no longer maintain it and changed over to the chromium engine instead. Because chromium is open-source, it's essentially free and the various browser makers all have input into the Chromium Project going forward. Looking back, various engines all have their pros and cons, and that debate will probably never be resolved.
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paulverizzo last edited by leocg
@blackbird71 Wow! Thank you! And I Do find it interesting. I go all the way back to Netscape! Didn't Opera also have a Gecko engine?
As noted upstream, I've been with Opera since it was ad supported and I paid whatever the fee was to remove the ads.
I do remember web designers having to accommodate all the players.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@paulverizzo said:
Didn't Opera also have a Gecko engine?
Nope, not that I can remember.