It turns out that this is caused by a conflict on their network with a Chromecast device that they may not even know existed. These alerts state that Kaspersky “cannot guarantee the authenticity of the domain to which the encrypted connection is established” is due to a “self-signed certificate,” as shown below.
These errors are displayed by the engine of Kaspersky, which allows encrypted SSL traffic to scan for malicious content. In a new bug report opened today by Chromium, a Google employee says that Windows users have experienced an increase in Chromecast discovery problems and that it appears to be related to antivirus software. “Reports of device discovery have suddenly increased,” the bug report states. “Reviewing the reports showed that it is common on the Windows platform. And reviewing the logs shows a commonality of authentication errors in the cast channel, which can often be attributed to anti-virus / security software.” In further investigation, he noted that Kaspersky users have complained about these problems since the end of January, which appears to be the same period as Ch. Google said they reached Kaspersky to solve the problem. BleepingComputer fired a virtual machine to test this and installed Kaspersky Total Security free trial.
I opened Chrome after installation and was immediately welcomed with the same error that Kaspersky users saw. Not only was I once welcomed with this error, but I have been shown several times as shown in the Kaspersky report below. When reviewing the 12-page topic in the Kaspersky forums, several users reported that this started after upgrading to Chrome 72 and appear to be a conflict between Chromecast and the SSL scanning engine of the antivirus software. To solve this, users have discovered that they can either deactivate SSL scanning or find the Chromecast device IP address and add it to the SSL scanning as exclusion. It is not suggested that SSL scanning be disabled to properly protect your computer. Instead, users should follow the following steps to exclude SSL scanning from offending IP addresses: When you open Chrome, you should no longer receive Kaspersky’s self – signed certificate errors. With Google reaching out to Kaspersky to solve this problem, you can hopefully reverse these changes soon. You might say, “But I don’t have Chromecast on my network!” I said the same thing until I followed the steps above and found out I actually had multiple Chromecast – supporting devices. New SmartTVs have now included ChromeCast so you can cast them from your browser or other compatible devices. I didn’t know that Chromecast was supported by my Vizio TV, which I now know I can see by clicking the Chrome menu and selecting Cast. What causes these errors is a hidden Chrome extension called the Chrome Media Router, which automatically scans a Chromecast device network when the browser starts. This causes the SSL scanning engine of Kaspersky to kick in and give the self-signed SSL certs errors. If you have multiple Chromecast devices on your network, you will see more of these alerts when you discover each Chromecast device. Now that Google and Kaspersky are working on this, hopefully, the problem will soon be a thing of the past. Image credit : Kaspersky