

If you need help with either of the two, please ask a new question because it would lead to far away from the original question.No problems here with the certificate for this website and the report also looks good. It's possible to apply this trust system-wide.ĭon't trust them and ask them to stop snooping on you or find a way around their connection interception with a VPN or equivalent. In that case you can ask Firefox to trust their certificate authority for all secured connections. Trust your internet provider and digital reflection to snoop on you “responsibly” without exposing you to security risks. As far as I can tell they supply appliances to internet providers that allows the latter to collect data on their customers for marketing research which apparently includes the interception of supposedly secure connections. The certificate presented to your web browser declares that it has been issued by “Digital Reflection”. The error message from your browser is meant to alert you that you're not actually talking to the server at gog.com but to someone else. This has nothing to do with Ubuntu or applications running on your computer. I:/C=US/ST=Virginia/L=Reston/O=Digital Reflection/OU=Digital Reflection Certificate Authority/CN=Digital internet connection is being intercepted by a proxy server that acts as a man-in-the-middle even on connections that are supposed to be private and authentic. When I run: openssl s_client -connect -prexit /dev/null I don't think it is something specific to the web site, as it happens to all secure sites (like the same if I go to and try to log in) and I don't think it is the browser, as it happens with both Chrome and Firefox.

The date and time on the computer are correct so that's not it.įirefox will have this error code: Error code: SEC_ERROR_UNKNOWN_ISSUER If I go to a web site, like and then try to login, I get a message that 'Your connection is not secure' (Firefox) or 'Your connection is not private' (Chrome). I have the latest version of Ubuntu 32-bit with the latest 32-bit versions of Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome. I have an Intel Core 2 Duo 3.0 MHz 32-bit with 2 GB RAM.
