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The eduroam Wi-Fi network asks me to accept a certificate for wireless-auth.berkeley.edu

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4.0 - Last modified on 2025-05-28 Revised by Sean Schluntz

3.0 - Last modified on 2025-05-27 Revised by Sean Schluntz

2.0 - Last modified on 2024-11-26 Revised by Sean Schluntz

1.0 - Created on 2023-06-01 Authored by Sean Schluntz

Users connecting a device to the eduroam Wi-Fi network for the first time often have to accept the certificate that is used for authentication. Existing wireless users may be prompted to accept a new certificate once a year when it is updated in the central systems.

This process is normal with an enterprise wireless network such as eduroam. A certificate is required to encrypt authentication but because it's not done through a web site a device may want the user to accept it instead of just allowing by default.

The serial numbers you can expect for wireless-auth.berkeley.edu during these calendar dates (not certificate experation):

Different operating systems and different platforms can display this information in multiple ways, including using spaces, using all capital letters, or adding two zeros to the beginning.

The certificate prompt may look like one of these:

macOS

macOS prompt to trust new certificate for eduroam Wi-Fi

 

Android

Android prompt to trust new certificate for eduroam Wi-Fi

 

iOS (iPhone, iPad)

iOS prompt to trust new certificate for eduroam Wi-Fi