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Cisco Exam 300-810 Topic 2 Question 101 Discussion

Actual exam question for Cisco's 300-810 exam
Question #: 101
Topic #: 2
[All 300-810 Questions]

Collaboration engineer is troubleshooting an issue with Cisco Jabber for Windows. Users report that they are prompted to accept or decline an invalid certificate when they attempt to log in to the client, r server certificates have been signed by a public C

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

To resolve invalid certificate prompts in Cisco Jabber when using CA-signed certificates, you need to import the root certificate of the Certificate Authority (CA) into the 'Trusted Root Certification Authorities' store on the Windows client machine. This store holds certificates from trusted CAs, enabling the system to validate the certificate chain.


Contribute your Thoughts:

Selma
7 months ago
Haha, the engineer should have known this already. It's like Cisco Jabber troubleshooting 101. Trusted Root Certification Authorities, here we come!
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Fausto
7 months ago
This is a classic Cisco Jabber issue. I'm glad the engineer knows where to import the certificate. Trusted Root Certification Authorities is the way to go.
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Cordelia
6 months ago
Great, the engineer should import the CA root certificate there to fix the problem.
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Bea
6 months ago
Yes, that's right. It will help resolve the issue with the invalid certificate prompt.
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Oretha
6 months ago
Trusted Root Certification Authorities store is the correct place to import the certificate.
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Leontine
7 months ago
I agree with the previous comments. Trusted Root Certification Authorities is the right place to import the certificate. No more annoying invalid certificate prompts!
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Ronald
6 months ago
A) Trusted Root Certification Authorities store
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Aretha
6 months ago
C) Trusted Root Certification Authorities store
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Charlie
6 months ago
B) Intermediate Certification Authorities store
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Lindsey
7 months ago
A) Trusted Root Certification Authorities store
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Denny
8 months ago
I agree with Gene, because the root certificate needs to be trusted for the client to accept it.
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Sherell
8 months ago
Importing the certificate to the Trusted Root Certification Authorities store is the way to go. This will ensure that the client can trust the server certificates.
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Silva
6 months ago
Thanks for the tip, I'll try that solution.
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Kasandra
7 months ago
Exactly, it's important for a secure connection.
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Troy
7 months ago
That makes sense, it will help the client trust the server certificates.
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Tora
7 months ago
Import the certificate to the Trusted Root Certification Authorities store.
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Natalya
8 months ago
The correct answer is C) Trusted Root Certification Authorities store. This is where the root certificate of the public CA that signed the server certificates should be imported.
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Rima
7 months ago
User 4: Thanks for clarifying!
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Marti
7 months ago
User 3: That makes sense, it's where the root certificate should be imported
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Maricela
8 months ago
User 2: C) Trusted Root Certification Authorities store
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Marva
8 months ago
Where should the engineer import the CA root certificate?
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Gene
8 months ago
I think the engineer should import the certificate into the Trusted Root Certification Authorities store.
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