25

I'm trying to access an intranet server under HTTPS, whose certificate has been autogenerated. With other browsers (IE, Firefox, Chrome, etc.) I have the option to ignore this error and to somehow "go ahead at my own risk".

In Edge I only see a red "Certificate error" message, but I cannot find a way to tell the browser: "don't worry, it's OK, just ignore it and go ahead".

Any suggestion?

Note: OS is Windows 10

Thanks!

Snostorp
  • 135

3 Answers3

27

On chromium edge type thisisunsafe while considering that it is, indeed, unsafe.

Schaki
  • 567
0

Update - August 10, 2019

In the recent version of Microsoft Edge, you can do this. So, if you don't see the bypass option, you might have to update/upgrade Windows 10 to update/upgrade Edge. If a major version of Windows (ex: 1903) are not offered automatically through Check for updates, you can get the updates manually through the Update Assistant.

Link: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10

In Windows 10 1903, you can bypass the certificate error by clicking the 'Details' and then clicking the 'Go on to the webpage' link. This is not recommended since it can be dangerous.

Edge - Screenshot

DxTx
  • 1,276
-3

This is what that screen looks like for me... Specifically, this is for an internal (intranet) site that uses a certificate which is signed by a trusted internal CA, but I'm going to the wrong URL (the cert is for brains.corp.<company>.com, not just brains), which triggers the untrusted certificate error screen. Screenshot of Edge visiting a site with an untrusted certificate Do you just not have the "Continue to this webpage (not recommended)" link? Clicking that lets me through to the "untrusted" web page just fine.

CBHacking
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