February 04, 2021, 04:31 PM
NK402Your Connection is Not Private
I am not very computer savvy (still trying to understand "cut and paste") but this message is driving me crazy. I used to be able to go on WiFi at McDonalds but now if I'm there, I get this message, no matter what site I try to reach. Today, I tried to get on the Trijicon site and get the same message on my Samsung tablet but I'm able to get on the site using my Samsung phone. Frustrating.
February 04, 2021, 04:33 PM
Flash-LBIt sounds like their lawyers (McDonalds) had them put that in so that no customer would sue them when their data got jacked.
February 04, 2021, 04:53 PM
BurtonRWYou should be using a VPN on public Wi-Fi anyway. If you insist on using public Wi-Fi at all, which you shouldn’t unless you really have to.
-Rob
February 04, 2021, 09:31 PM
NK402quote:
Originally posted by BurtonRW:
You should be using a VPN on public Wi-Fi anyway. If you insist on using public Wi-Fi at all, which you shouldn’t unless you really have to.
-Rob
This happens in my living room using my cable router.
February 04, 2021, 10:36 PM
NuclearYeah, my new iPad throws up “Not Secure” every time I visit this website, no matter where I am or if I’m using a VPN or not.
February 05, 2021, 08:50 AM
Jimbo54quote:
Originally posted by Nuclear:
Yeah, my new iPad throws up “Not Secure” every time I visit this website, no matter where I am or if I’m using a VPN or not.
Yeah, me too. I know that my WiFi here at home is secure, so it's not the reason. It's probably because this isn't an HTTPS address.
Jim
February 05, 2021, 02:58 PM
smschulzquote:
^^^^ this ^^^^
It is an alarm for lack of HTTPS ~ not always a big deal if you know where you are going.
Happens a lot on local web (for configuration) interface devices where establishing a SSL cert is not yet done.
February 11, 2021, 07:56 PM
mikeyspizzaThe bad thing about it is that if I don't give a damn, I still cannot proceed.
March 01, 2021, 11:34 AM
ensigmaticThere are three reasons a browser may throw this up:
- Destination site is not using HTTPS
- Destination site is using HTTPS, but the certificate is expired
- Destination is using HTTPS and the cert is current, but it's a self-signed cert, which means it cannot be validated
For all three cases: Often you can click on "proceed anyway" or "advanced," then "proceed anyway," and get to where you (think) you want to go.
I wrote "think," in parenthesis, above, because, lacking a valid, traceable HTTPS connection and certificate, you may not be connecting to where you think you are.
With sites like SIGforum, where there's no exchange of money or sensitive information, it's not such a big deal. If you
ever get this kind of thing from a vendor site, your bank/CU, or what-have-you:
DO NOT PROCEED. Ever.
When your mobile device issues such warnings it means it's an unsecured (open) WiFi connection that anybody may be snooping, or that the connection may be hijacked--taking you places that look right, but are not what they appear to be.
March 01, 2021, 12:16 PM
Flash-LBI use public WiFi with my iPhone all the time when I'm traveling and never have any problems, but then I don't go anywhere that would interest anyone hacking, just gun boards and news boards.
If I want to go into a sensitive site(almost never), I turn off WiFi and use data.