I want to disable security in Android Chrome. On search i come across we can disable security for normal Windows Chrome using the parameter - "chromium-browser --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="[some directory here]""
However when i search how to do it for Android Chrome. I come across chrome://flags option
I have opened and add the addrees in "insecure origins treated as secure" enabled.
But still facing CORS issue
Please advise.
Related
Anytime I have dev tools open on localhost my cookies are deleted and I am redirected to the login page on every page load which means I cannot use dev tools to debug or get insight into my site. I have localhost setup with a valid SSL cert (self-signed) and the site works normally until I open dev tools. How do I fix or disable this new "security" or setting in chrome?
After lots of issues and trying out many different things I came across this post/answer
When adding a Javascript library, Chrome complains about a missing source map, why?
Turns out that when I opened Dev Tools it would request a CSS map and the request was being sent to a different firewall causing my application to require me to re-authenticate every time this resource was requested. Turning off the CSS source map option fixed the issue
https://i.imgur.com/qKyu744.jpg
This started happening just a few days ago. I can access the site on the same computer in Firefox. Not sure why it is telling me that the site is insecure, but that must be related. I tried ipconfig /flushdns, deleting my cookies, and disabling my firewall but none of those fixed it. Can't find any solutions online either so far. Using the latest Chrome update and Windows 10. Please help!
Edit: Solved my issue by installing this Windows update:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/4284835
It is possible that you might have deleted trusted certificates from chrome trust store (github CA SSL certificate is issued by DigiCert High Assurance EV Root CA ), where as in for other browsers the trust store must be a different location in your case.
To check above listed certificate present in Chrome trusted store or not, do the following
Open Chrome then Go to Settings => Manage Certificates - Click on it, when Certificates pop-up shows then check at' Trusted Root Certificates Authorities, if desired certificate is not present then import it.
For what it's worth, this is what worked for me:
Open up the start menu and search for and open "Internet Options".
Go to the "Connections" tab.
Click on "LAN settings".
Untick all the checkboxes (there are 3).
Click OK twice and then access https://github.com/ via Google Chrome.
The reason why it works on Firefox is because it has its own proxy settings. Google Chrome takes the proxy settings of the computer.
If you enter the website URL with www, it will work in chrome.
To avoid this you need to add another CNAME without www.
I am using MacOS and I had similar issue of accessing GitLab with Chrome, but no issue with Safari.
What helps me finally is: Setting -> Privacy and Security, and turn off "Use Secure DNS".
If CORS extension has been downloaded and enabled in the Chrome browser then disable the CORS(Allow-control-Allow-origin) extension. It will work..!
I noticed that recently Chrome started blocking flash on a site even when it's manually allowed in the site settings. Probably something has been changed in security policy last days? I completed all steps desribed on Google Chrome Help and still have no luck.
I'm running Windows 10, Google Chrome Version 60.0.3112.78 (Official Build) (64-bit)
Try:
Launch chrome
Navigate to chrome://flags/#prefer-html-over-flash
The flag is most likely set to Default
Change the flag to Disabled
Relaunch Chrome
Does Flash content display now?
I'm running Google Chrome on Windows 10, latest editions. Chrome refuses to open any pages, returning "Aw snap" error messages. To resolve this I've:
Removed all extensions.
Uninstalled and reinstalled Chrome.
Tried Chrome on a different user.
Ran Chrome Cleanup Tool.
Deleted my Google folder in Appdata.
Incognito pages don't work either.
None of these worked. Firefox at all times is working perfectly so its not an internet problem.
Anyone have any ideas on how to fix this?
Please follow below steps, to resolve "Aw snap" error messages with Chrome browser.
Steps To Resolve:
Go to Chrome shortcut in the Desktop (If not exists create one)
Right click -> Properties
In the target field, At the end add a space followed by the below -no-sandbox
Apply-Ok
Launch chrome using the shortcut
Follow the below steps
Go to windows task manager
go to details tab
kill all the chrome process
run the chrome it will open
It is likely that malware is trying (and failing) to modify the page that is loading. I've also seen this as a symptom of machines that had nasty redirect malware removed, as the redirects that the malware creates no longer have anywhere to resolve.
I highly recommend a fresh Windows 10 install, only way to be sure you're fully free of whatever may have infected your current Windows installation.
I am able to access a URL in Chrome 36 and IE8 but in Chrome 39 or 40 or Firefox 35 it throws the error:
Unable to make a secure connection to the server. This may be a
problem with the server, or it may be requiring a client
authentication certificate that you don't have.
Error code: ERR_SSL_PROTOCOL_ERROR}.
It seems that it is an issue related to the SSL certificate. How can I fix this?
Google announced that they would begin removing support for SHA-1 cryptographic hash algorithm beginning with Chrome 39. According to Google:
HTTPS sites whose certificate chains use SHA-1 and are valid past 1 January 2017 will no longer appear to be fully trustworthy in Chrome’s user interface.
There are several sites which can provide detailed analysis of your SSL certificate chain, such as Qualys SSL Labs' SSL Test.
Google Chrome does have a highly risky command-line option --ignore-certificate-errors which might bypass certain certificate errors. Be aware that ignoring certificate errors puts all of your SSL traffic at risk of being eavesdropped on.
It's also possible that this is a new bug. Google switched from using OpenSSL library to it's own "BoringSSL" library in Chrome 38. To report a bug in Chrome visit chrome://help/ and click "Report an issue".
Try this. In Chrome, enter "chrome://flags/#enable-quic" without the quotes as a URL. CTRL + F to search for "quic", at which point you'll find...
Experimental QUIC protocol. Mac, Windows, Linux, Chrome OS, Android
Enable experimental QUIC protocol support. #enable-quic
Turn that to disabled, and let it restart your browser when prompted below.
Go to Windows Firewall, click on "Restore Defaults", then again. The problem should be fixed.
For me this issue resolved when I turned off my Antivirus Browsing control.
First check that in :
Internet Explorer- go to tools/internet options/advanced in the settings box, scroll all the way to the bottom and select Use TLS 1.0 and it will fix the problem.
SSL 2.0 or 3.0 and these are should also be selected.
Google Chrome-Click "wrench" sign on the tope right of it.Click Options then Under the bonnet in network click Change Proxy Settings and follow the steps above as in Internet Explorer.
If this didn't work try the following steps:
Unhide all the files and folders.
Then go to C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts.
Right click on hosts file,then click properties. Then click security tab. After that click edit.
Here,click system and you have to check on allow full control and uncheck deny.
Click OK and then OK.
Now delete the hosts file.
You could read google forum tips from here
or you get all the details solution about err_ssl_protocol_error from here. I hope this will work and fix the error.