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Your connection is not private
Attackers might be trying to steal your information from www.liquidpoker.net (for example, passwords, messages, or credit cards). NET::ERR_CERT_INVALID Automatically report details of possible security incidents to Google. Privacy policy
Been getting this message from LP for days now, following link from teamliquid.net homepage...
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Still getting this.... any explanation/help?
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Johto4887 Posts
What browser are you using?
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Johto4887 Posts
Is your operating system updated as well as Chrome? For me the certificate works just fine in Chrome. My guess is you are on Windows XP which is not a supported OS anymore...
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Yes I'm on XP. Can access main page, liquid hearth etc... didn't think it was an issue. Why only LP ?
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Johto4887 Posts
LiquidHearth, LiquidDota, TeamLiquid.net etc do not have https support yet. The problem you have is that Windows XP does not include the certificate provider that is used by Team Liquids SSL certificate. Your best bet would be to use Firefox as Firefox brings its own certificate storage with the browser and includes the needed root certificate. Chrome and Internet Explorer rely on the operating systems certificate storage which is missing the IdenTrust certificate "DST Root CA X3"
As Windows XP is not maintained by Microsoft anymore you shouldn't rely on them to fix this as they will not do so.
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NET::ERR_CERT_INVALID makes me think your system time is set incorrectly rather than a missing root certificate.
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System time? As in date/month/year etc? Taken from internet... I notice my system time is 1 minute faster than what it says on TL....
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I mean now it's the same but it was out a second ago...
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I'm about 50+ seconds faster than TL apparently.
On March 14 2016 09:40 FO-nTTaX wrote: LiquidHearth, LiquidDota, TeamLiquid.net etc do not have https support yet. The problem you have is that Windows XP does not include the certificate provider that is used by Team Liquids SSL certificate. Your best bet would be to use Firefox as Firefox brings its own certificate storage with the browser and includes the needed root certificate. Chrome and Internet Explorer rely on the operating systems certificate storage which is missing the IdenTrust certificate "DST Root CA X3"
As Windows XP is not maintained by Microsoft anymore you shouldn't rely on them to fix this as they will not do so. Most of that is way above my head Key points understood, ty.
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Has it be permanently taken down? If so, RIP LP. We could have used a little heads up.
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It's miraculously back... For now.
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