Personally I am getting very very fed up with Avast blocking sites as the site is using a cloudflaressl certificate. I dont want to have to put in individual overrides for each one and *.cloudflaressl.com doesnt appear to work either!
This poll is not needed at all.
Have you tried to contact avast using…
https://www.avast.com/support or…
https://www.avast.com/contact-form.php
I tried via the contact form and never received a response. But if you search on google quite a few people seem to be getting the same error.
Thought it might be a good idea to gauge how many others are actually being affected by this and then with numbers show Avast directly how bad the problem is. I have used the product for years and recommended it to family and friends as the one to use.
I tried via the contact form and never received a response.
avast support https://support.avast.com → submit a support ticket
I got the same problem and it is extremely annoying. Avast blocks even garfield.com >:(
I was able to access Garfield.com without any errors
also try retrojunk.com and see if you get this cloudflaressl error.
make sure that you have the https scanning enabled.
No problem there either and https is enabled
I am using the latest beta
Snap, I don’t know why AuserA couldn’t access garfield.com as it is an HTTP page so no HTTPS scanning going on.
Is it avast blocking it or the browser ?
Not getting a cloudflare error, but I am getting another.
Whilst the page is displayed avast also mentions the blocking of a sub domain, distro-1.retrojunk.com, so many of the images are blocked.
on retrojunk.com i get sni34898.cloudflaressl.com and on garfield .com it’s sni144602.cloudflaressl.com
https scanning is enabled and running windows xp sp3
It’s starting to affect sites I go to that I know are safe including an art site. Can I get around it by putting the site on the exclusion list? Or would it have to be Cloudflare on the exclusion list?
See here as to why cloudflare is distrusted http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2015/10/12/certificate-authorities-issue-hundreds-of-deceptive-ssl-certificates-to-fraudsters.html