Understand how the internet access service validates the TLS/SSL certificates of web servers in HTTPS inspection.
The Transport Layer Security/Secure Socket Layer (TLS/SSL) certificate of an HTTPS
               web server
               is comprised of a chain of certificates that start from the server’s certificate and
               terminate
               with the root certificate.
- 
Server certificate: Contains the public key to be used to validate the actual digital signature.
- 
Intermediate Certification Authority (CA) certificates: Contain the public keys to validate the server certificate or another intermediate certificate in the chain.
- 
Root CA certificate: contains the public key used to validate the first intermediate CA certificate or the server certificate in the chain.
The internet access service validates the certificate chain of a web server stored
               in the
               system certificate store. Based on the validation result, it determines whether to
               block access
               to the associated websites or decrypt the HTTPS traffic based on inspection rules
               for further
               access control.
 
		