{"package_name":"info.guardianproject.cacert","name":"CACertMan","summary":"Disable untrusted certificates","category":"Security","icon_url":"/api/icon/info.guardianproject.cacert","latest_version_code":4,"latest_version_name":"0.0.2.20111012","apk_url":"/api/apk/info.guardianproject.cacert","apk_size":172681,"apk_sha256":"d2aa60e0d83f51098db89554970402428e3c422cfd7908d85275672060d5edd9","source_kind":"fdroid-repo","repo_slug":"fdroid-archive","last_updated":1779371416,"release_timestamp":1323561600,"description":"Android 4+ allows you to disable certificates from the system Settings and root\nisn't required, so try that first if you want to manually mess with the\ncertificates. The app won't work with Android 4+ anyway.\n\nAn app to manage security certificates on your phone also containing a version\nof the Android CACert keystore derived from Mozilla. If a certificate has\nrecently become untrusted you can either install an update to this app or you\ncan backup and remove certificates by yourself.\n\nRequires root: Yes, it writes to the system partition. You will need a device\nthat has the ‘grep' command on it (via busybox: present on most custom ROMs). If\nthe ‘save' doesn't work, then you will need to make your /system partition\nread-write by using a file explorer like https://f-droid.org/packages/com.ghostsq.commander or via a\ncommand in https://f-droid.org/packages/jackpal.androidterm.","categories":["Security"]}