![]() Chrome and FF are both bloatware these days and are frankly becoming unusable. I’ve switched to Brave and hopefully that team will take heed and listen to us. Mind you, Mozilla is not much better these days. I believe this is because the developers are an arrogant bunch of pricks who think they know better than everyone else and will ram changes like this through for NO GOOD reason and in the face of much protest and much evidence that their changes are bad ideas and poorly thought out. What a ridiculous, poorly thought-out change to make. ![]() This is sadly typical of Google in general and Chrome specifically these days. You can also select the Main Origin from the pane to see more verbose information about the connection, including Certificate Transparency details. Clicking on each origin will display that site’s information in the main pane. If you opened Developer Tools after visiting the page, just refresh the page and the left-hand pane will populate. There is also the option to see more detailed information about all the origins (hostnames) that you are connected to via that site. The main pane tells you about the site’s certificate, the HTTPS connection parameters, and the presence of mixed content. Once you have the Security tab open, you will find all the other information about HTTPS/SSL that has slowly been moving out of the Page Info menu. While it takes a few more clicks and button presses, it’s still the same information you are used to. There you have it! That’s how you view SSL certificate details in Chrome 56. The certificate viewer you are used to will open up. Select the Security Tab, which is second from the right with default settings. Here’s a couple of quick screenshots to show you where to click.Īnd just find Developer Tools on the dropdown menu… You can also get to Chrome’s Developer Tools by opening the Chrome menu (⋮), then going to More Tools -> Developer Tools. The quickest way there is with a keyboard shortcut: OS This change is being made as part of Chrome’s campaign to simplify their security UI/UX and tailor it for a more mainstream audience that does not know what SSL certificates, Certificate Authorities, or key signature algorithms are.įor the power-users and developers who do want to see details about their HTTPS connection and the site’s SSL certificate, you will need to go to the Security tab in Developer Tools. Starting in Chrome 56, you will no longer be able to see details about a website’s SSL certificate by clicking on the padlock icon in the address bar. In Industry Lowdown A quick guide on how to view SSL certificate details in Chrome 56.
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