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  1. Nov 8, 2023 · In older versions of Chrome, there was a flag you could enable "chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost" to ignore invalid SSL certificates for localhost. In the newer Chrome versions (Version 119.0.6045.124) this flag is no longer available.

  2. Nov 27, 2020 · chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost. The flag is described as: Allow invalid certificates for resources loaded from localhost. Allows requests to localhost over HTTPS even when an invalid certificate is presented. – Mac, Windows, Linux, Chrome OS, Android.

  3. Feb 1, 2024 · found command to enable but did not work as expected. "open -a "Google Chrome" --args --allow-insecure-localhost". able to enable that on UI and relaunch the chrome will work but not using command as below.

  4. Feb 8, 2023 · There are two ways to set Chrome flags: From the chrome://flags page. By opening Chrome from the command line in a terminal. chrome://flags. To set a flag from the chrome://flags page in Chrome, you need to find the flag, toggle the setting for the flag, then relaunch the browser.

  5. In Chrome, put in chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost in the address bar. Enable the option that says "Allow invalid certificates for resources loaded from localhost". Restart Chrome, and it should allow the site.

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  7. If you just want this for local SSL certificates, then you may be able to get away with just using this option in Chrome, allow-insecure-localhost: chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost. On a related note, if you want to create fully trusted self signed SSL certs for Chrome/Safari, you can find out how to do that here