I am running into exactly the same problem as Bas Zoetekouw. I added the
enable_autosuspend=0 option:
stan@stan-desktop:~$ cat /etc/modprobe.d/btusb.conf
options btusb enable_autosuspend=0
But I see the following in dmesg after reboot:
[4.026743] btusb: unknown parameter 'enable_autosuspend
I have reported this to Marktplaats.nl, suggesting they include the
certificate in the chain that is being sent out by the server.
(I wonder why DigiCert has not been able to convice Mozilla to include
this certificate, yet they still sign certificates that are intended for
public verification usi
** Description changed:
- The "DigiCert High Assurance EV Root CA" certificate is missing, which
- means that the system does not trust web sites that are using SSL
- certificates signed by that root. An example is a popular website in the
- Netherlands https://marktplaats.nl. The result is that n
This is on ElementaryOS 0.4.1, which is based on Ubuntu 16.04:
sudo dpkg -s ca-certificates | grep Version:
Version: 20170717~16.04.1
And also on ElementaryOS 5 Beta 2, which is based on Ubuntu 18.04:
sudo dpkg -s ca-certificates | grep Version:
Version: 20180409
I was directed
Thanks, Seth, for looking into this. You're right; that certificate is
indeed installed by default.
I seem to have misstated the name of the certificate in my original bug
report and post. It should have been the "DigiCert SHA2 Secure Server CA"
certificate, which is the one I describe in the step
Public bug reported:
The "DigiCert High Assurance EV Root CA" certificate is missing, which
means that the system does not trust web sites that are using SSL
certificates signed by that root. An example is a popular website in the
Netherlands https://marktplaats.nl. The result is that no resources