Great facilitator and ensured the whole class was happy and competent at the end of the session.' Re: Adobe Acrobat Plugin for Chrome in MAC Madhavi_Vadali May 24, 2011 1:32 AM ( in response to MichaelKazlow ) Currently on windows chrome has the list of plugins with adobe acrobat plugin listed in it. In the last few years, Google Chrome has become the browser of choice for millions of users around the world. While Internet Explorer still boasts the most users as a result of legacy installations, Chrome has been closing the gap relentlessly since its launch in 2008. This website and third-party tools use cookies for functional, analytical, and advertising purposes. By continuing to browse the site, closing this banner, scrolling this webpage, or clicking a link, you agree to these cookies.

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I have created a self-signed SSL certificate for the localhost CN. Firefox accepts this certificate after initially complaining about it, as expected. Chrome and IE, however, refuse to accept it, even after adding the certificate to the system certificate store under Trusted Roots. Even though the certificate is listed as correctly installed when I click 'View certificate information' in Chrome's HTTPS popup, it still insists the certificate cannot be trusted. What am I supposed to do to get Chrome to accept the certificate and stop complaining about it? When you say Firefox complains about it initially, do you mean that it asks you to add a certificate exception?
This shouldn't happen if the certificate is correctly installed. It sounds to me that all three browsers are complaining, but Firefox allows you to cancel its complaint. I'm posting this as a comment as I don't have a specific answer, but I have done exactly this and it works fine in all three browsers. I would suggest that you try and get it working on IE first, and then once that is happy worry about the other two. Sorry I couldn't be of more help! – Sep 28 '11 at 8:49 •. Landscape design for mac review.
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This worked for me: • Using Chrome, hit a page on your server via HTTPS and continue past the red warning page (assuming you haven't done this already). • Open up Chrome Settings > Show advanced settings > HTTPS/SSL > Manage Certificates. • Click the Authorities tab and scroll down to find your certificate under the Organization Name that you gave to the certificate. • Select it, click Edit ( NOTE: in recent versions of Chrome, the button is now 'Advanced' instead of 'Edit'), check all the boxes and click OK. You may have to restart Chrome. You should get the nice green lock on your pages now.
EDIT: I tried this again on a new machine and the certificate did not appear on the Manage Certificates window just by continuing from the red untrusted certificate page. I had to do the following: • On the page with the untrusted certificate ( is crossed out in red), click the lock > Certificate Information. NOTE: on newer versions of chrome, you have to open Developer Tools > Security, and select View certificate. • Click the Details tab > Export.
Choose PKCS #7, single certificate as the file format. • Then follow my original instructions to get to the Manage Certificates page.
Click the Authorities tab > Import and choose the file to which you exported the certificate, and make sure to choose PKCS #7, single certificate as the file type. • If prompted certification store, choose Trusted Root Certificate Authorities • Check all boxes and click OK. Restart Chrome.
UPDATE 11/2017: This answer probably won't work for most newer versions of Chrome. UPDATE 02/2016: Better Instructions for Mac Users Can be Found. • On the site you want to add, right-click the red lock icon in the address bar: • Click the tab labeled Connection, then click Certificate Information • Click the Details tab, the click the button Copy to File.
This will open the Certificate Export Wizard, click Next to get to the Export File Format screen. • Choose DER encoded binary X.509 (.CER), click Next • Click Browse. And save the file to your computer. Name it something descriptive. Click Next, then click Finish.
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• Open Chrome settings, scroll to the bottom, and click Show advanced settings. • Under HTTPS/SSL, click Manage certificates. • Click the Trusted Root Certification Authorities tab, then click the Import. This opens the Certificate Import Wizard. Click Next to get to the File to Import screen. • Click Browse.
And select the certificate file you saved earlier, then click Next. • Select Place all certificates in the following store. The selected store should be Trusted Root Certification Authorities. If it isn't, click Browse.