RE: Importing self-signed certs into Outlook

2001-11-14 Thread Ryan Hurst
Additionally since it is a self signed certificate place it in both the "My" store and the "Root" store. Ryan -Original Message- From: Ryan Hurst [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 4:33 PM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: RE: Im

RE: Importing self-signed certs into Outlook

2001-11-14 Thread Ryan Hurst
Tony, Outlook has a "multi-dimensional" certificate store. There are user stores and machine stores. Within each store there are various compartments my, intermediate, root, publishers, etc. You may have problems if the certificate was imported into the incorrect certificate store. Try using the

Re: Importing self-signed certs into Outlook

2001-11-14 Thread Michael Sierchio
Dr S N Henson wrote: > Oops, didn't read the query enough. It may well not be possible to > actually use a self signed user certificate. Netscape also has problems > with this in that the same certificate has to be a user and CA > certificate. You may have to create a self signed root CA and sign

Re: Importing self-signed certs into Outlook

2001-11-14 Thread Dr S N Henson
Dr S N Henson wrote: > > Tony Lill wrote: > > > > I've managed to get outlook to work with stunnel and a self signed > > certificate for both sending and recieving mail. The only problem is > > that outlook keeps whining about not being able to verify the cert > > because the root certificate is

Re: Importing self-signed certs into Outlook

2001-11-14 Thread Dr S N Henson
Tony Lill wrote: > > I've managed to get outlook to work with stunnel and a self signed > certificate for both sending and recieving mail. The only problem is > that outlook keeps whining about not being able to verify the cert > because the root certificate is not trusted. > > I tried importing