On 10/22/2013 9:44 AM, Yehuda Katz wrote: > On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 9:39 AM, Dennis Putnam <d...@bellsouth.net > <mailto:d...@bellsouth.net>> wrote: > > Thanks. That might make more sense (at least to me). After more > reading, > I am not sure that I don't have SNI capable version of httpd already > installed (how do I tell?). The pages that work are very simple > but the > one that doesn't is complex and has lots of graphics. If that is the > case, why are they not encrypted like everything else (assuming > they are > not referenced on a different server)? > > > As I mentioned, if you don't have SNI, then you should see major > warnings from the browser that something is wrong when you go to any > site but the first one. > > As far as finding the offending image: Go to the page in your browser, > right click on the page and choose view source (or a similar option). > Then search in the source for http:// > That should let you find which images are not secure. > If the URLs are publicly accessible, post them here if you want > someone to have a specific look (or email me privately if you don't > want them to be public and I will try to have a look). > > - Y > Ah ha! You hit it. There are references to social media on the page that use http (Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter). Since they reference a different site will just changing it to https be sufficient or is there some other workaround? Thanks.
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