Hackers News Hackers News
  • CyberSecurity News
  • Threats
  • Attacks
  • Vulnerabilities
  • Breaches
  • Comparisons

Social Media

Hackers News Hackers News
  • CyberSecurity News
  • Threats
  • Attacks
  • Vulnerabilities
  • Breaches
  • Comparisons
Search the Site
Popular Searches:
technology Amazon AI
Recent Posts
Microsoft Site Warning: Certificate Expiry Causes Issues
June 15, 2026
SHADOWBYT3$ Claims Nintendo Breach, Sensitive Data
June 15, 2026
DPAPISnoop Tool Recovers Windows Credentials Offline via
June 15, 2026
Home/CyberSecurity News/Microsoft Site Warning: Certificate Expiry Causes Issues
CyberSecurity News

Microsoft Site Warning: Certificate Expiry Causes Issues

A lapse in Microsoft’s certificate management practices led to a domain, critical for system administrators worldwide testing Microsoft 365 connectivity, generating untrusted connection...

Jennifer sherman
Jennifer sherman
June 15, 2026 2 Min Read
2 0

A lapse in Microsoft’s certificate management practices led to a domain, critical for system administrators worldwide testing Microsoft 365 connectivity, generating untrusted connection warnings in web browsers beginning Monday.

The connectivity.office.com domain a widely relied-upon tool for IT professionals to verify their network’s connectivity to Microsoft 365 and confirm that firewalls aren’t silently blocking critical Microsoft services, is now displaying a NET::ERR_CERT_DATE_INVALID error in Chromium-based browsers.

The certificate, issued by Microsoft Azure RSA TLS Issuing CA 07, expired on Sunday, June 14, 2026, at 08:38:02 UTC, having last been renewed on December 16, 2025, meaning it carried only a six-month validity window that Microsoft failed to renew in time.

The certificate viewer confirms the domain is owned by Microsoft Corporation, with the TLS certificate having a SHA-256 fingerprint of c52ca2abaffcb192ef02ff7c131504d32b0311024c4ec7f8a439c44f17347baa.

An SSL server report retrieved Monday confirmed the lapse, showing the certificate was valid for exactly 180 days before expiring without renewal. The browser warning explicitly states: “This server could not prove that it is connectivity.office.com; its security certificate expired 2 days ago.”

The connectivity.office.com domain is specifically designed to help enterprise IT teams and network engineers diagnose Microsoft 365 connectivity issues — testing whether firewalls, proxies, or network appliances are interfering with traffic to Microsoft servers.

With the certificate now expired, browsers flag the site as untrusted, and any automated tooling or scripts relying on HTTPS connections to this endpoint may fail silently or throw certificate validation errors, breaking diagnostic workflows.

Organizations that use this endpoint in network health checks or onboarding verification scripts are directly affected.

This incident is particularly embarrassing given Microsoft’s concurrent push around certificate hygiene; the company is actively urging enterprise customers to renew aging 2011-era Secure Boot certificates ahead of their own June–October 2026 expiry schedule.

Allowing a publicly facing, IT-critical domain’s TLS certificate to lapse contrasts with that guidance. Certificate lifecycle management failures are among the most preventable security misconfigurations, and automated renewal systems, which Microsoft itself promotes through Azure, exist precisely to prevent such lapses.

Microsoft has not yet issued a public statement regarding the expired certificate as of the time of writing. The company is expected to renew the certificate imminently, given the affected domain’s operational visibility.

Disclaimer: HackersRadar reports on cybersecurity threats and incidents for informational and awareness purposes only. We do not engage in hacking activities, data exfiltration, or the hosting or distribution of stolen or leaked information. All content is based on publicly available sources.

Tags:

Security

Share Article

Jennifer sherman

Jennifer sherman

Jennifer is a cybersecurity news reporter covering data breaches, ransomware campaigns, and dark web markets. With a background in incident response, Jennifer provides unique insights into how organizations respond to cyber attacks and the evolving tactics of threat actors. Her reporting has covered major breaches affecting millions of users and has helped organizations understand emerging threats. Jennifer combines technical knowledge with investigative journalism to deliver in-depth coverage of cybersecurity incidents.

Previous Post

SHADOWBYT3$ Claims Nintendo Breach, Sensitive Data

No Comment! Be the first one.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular Posts
Hackers Use Microsoft Graph Reconnaissance to Target Payroll and
June 15, 2026
China-Nexus Hackers Exploit PAM Modules Backdoored Credential
June 15, 2026
SearchJack: 23 Chrome Extensions Hijack Campaign Uses
June 15, 2026
Top Authors
Marcus Rodriguez
Marcus Rodriguez
Jennifer sherman
Jennifer sherman
Emy Elsamnoudy
Emy Elsamnoudy
Let's Connect
156k
2.25m
285k

Related Posts

Jennifer sherman
By Jennifer sherman
Threats

GlassWorm Attacks macOS via Malicious VS Code…

January 1, 2026
Emy Elsamnoudy
By Emy Elsamnoudy
Attacks

ClickFix Attack Hides Malicious Code via Stegan Security

January 1, 2026
Sarah simpson
By Sarah simpson
Vulnerabilities

MongoBleed Detector Tool Detects Critical MongoDB CVE-

January 1, 2026
Emy Elsamnoudy
By Emy Elsamnoudy
Breaches

Conti Ransomware Gang Leaders & Infrastructure Exposed

January 1, 2026
Hackers News Hackers News
  • [email protected]

Quick Links

  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of service

Categories

Attacks
Breaches
Comparisons
CyberSecurity News
Threats
Vulnerabilities

Let's keep in touch

receive fresh updates and breaking cyber news every day and week!

All Rights Reserved by HackersRadar ©2026

Follow Us