Office365 on Android - Certificate Error
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@zachary715 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
Obviously those instructions are just ripped from Google, but the same process should apply.
He doesn't have any MDM applications installed, therefore none to remove
Did you check the settings to confirm?
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@JaredBusch said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
An Cert that is good for 24 years. . . yeah sure, I'll just trust that.
That is normal for a self signed cert for a local device. The last thing you want is for the self signed cert on a piece of gear to expire.
While I get that, but Samsung shouldn't have an Fortinet cert, at least you wouldn't think they would.
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With O365 are you not using an MDM to authorize the device?
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@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@JaredBusch said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
An Cert that is good for 24 years. . . yeah sure, I'll just trust that.
That is normal for a self signed cert for a local device. The last thing you want is for the self signed cert on a piece of gear to expire.
While I get that, but Samsung shouldn't have an Fortinet cert, at least you wouldn't think they would.
It doens't something on his device tried to connect to something and Fortigate got in the middle.
My money is on this happened outside the office and the user ignored it until they could come in to IT.
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@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
With O365 are you not using an MDM to authorize the device?
I don't.
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@JaredBusch said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@JaredBusch said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
An Cert that is good for 24 years. . . yeah sure, I'll just trust that.
That is normal for a self signed cert for a local device. The last thing you want is for the self signed cert on a piece of gear to expire.
While I get that, but Samsung shouldn't have an Fortinet cert, at least you wouldn't think they would.
It doens't something on his device tried to connect to something and Fortigate got in the middle.
My money is on this happened outside the office and the user ignored it until they could come in to IT.
That's what I was wondering. He started noticing it around lunch so I was thinking he could have potentially ran out and connected to some open hotspot, at which point his mail tried to sync and he received that certificate error. My confusion is I would think once he disconnected and connected back to mobile data or our network that it would no longer give that message. Is it possible that the message will continue to stay up until acknowledged in some fashion? Restarting the phone did no good.
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@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
With O365 are you not using an MDM to authorize the device?
Not at this time, no.
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@zachary715 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
With O365 are you not using an MDM to authorize the device?
Not at this time, no.
We don't either.
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@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@zachary715 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
Obviously those instructions are just ripped from Google, but the same process should apply.
He doesn't have any MDM applications installed, therefore none to remove
Did you check the settings to confirm?
Yes I did. Although it was difficult to sift through his list of apps to see if any were installed. Which just reinforces the need to seriously look into a good MDM solution which whitelists certain approved apps which can be installed.
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@zachary715 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@zachary715 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
Obviously those instructions are just ripped from Google, but the same process should apply.
He doesn't have any MDM applications installed, therefore none to remove
Did you check the settings to confirm?
Yes I did. Although it was difficult to sift through his list of apps to see if any were installed. Which just reinforces the need to seriously look into a good MDM solution which whitelists certain approved apps which can be installed.
FFS.... He is not telling you to look for an app. You are looking for specific MDM policies in the settings.
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@JaredBusch said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@zachary715 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@zachary715 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
Obviously those instructions are just ripped from Google, but the same process should apply.
He doesn't have any MDM applications installed, therefore none to remove
Did you check the settings to confirm?
Yes I did. Although it was difficult to sift through his list of apps to see if any were installed. Which just reinforces the need to seriously look into a good MDM solution which whitelists certain approved apps which can be installed.
FFS.... He is not telling you to look for an app. You are looking for specific MDM policies in the settings.
Simply making a comment in reference to last portion about "Uninstall the ME MDM App" and how not only was it not installed, but he also had a large portion of other unnecessary apps on his phone. I did also check the Security settings he referenced.
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While an MDM can limit what apps are allowed (or not allowed) the most simple usage is to tag company owned data.
This way if someone leaves the company with their personal cellphone, the MDM policy can wipe out anything tagged as company property.
@JaredBusch thanks for clarifying the point, that this policy is under the security settings. The app is moot to the policy being there or not if one exists at all.
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@DustinB3403 said in Office365 on Android - Certificate Error:
While an MDM can limit what apps are allowed (or not allowed) the most simple usage is to tag company owned data.
This way if someone leaves the company with their personal cellphone, the MDM policy can wipe out anything tagged as company property.
@JaredBusch thanks for clarifying the point, that this policy is under the security settings. The app is moot to the policy being there or not if one exists at all.
To clarify further, there were no MDM policies set under Device Admin outside of what O365 already applies. I did remove that but that caused it to log out of the account/remove it and when I reconnected things, the problem went away as I anticipated. Still was curious as to why it was happening though. My best guess is what I previously mentioned about him connecting to an open hotspot and it causing the issue.