It is sad that snap developers have taken such intrusive decisions by creating yet another isolated certificate infrastructure. The Ubuntu system already has its own infrastructure in /etc/ssl/certs. So, now we have two (besides all the other built-in certificates in various tools and packages).
In all honesty, why do snap developers think that their own /snap/core/current/etc/ssl/certs is so much better than the system's /etc/ssl/certs? And not only that, all documented procedures to deal with certificates (like update-ca-certificates) become useless.
It is sad that snap developers have taken such intrusive decisions by creating yet another isolated certificate infrastructure. The Ubuntu system already has its own infrastructure in /etc/ssl/certs. So, now we have two (besides all the other built-in certificates in various tools and packages).
In all honesty, why do snap developers think that their own /snap/core/ current/ etc/ssl/ certs is so much better than the system's /etc/ssl/certs? And not only that, all documented procedures to deal with certificates (like update- ca-certificates ) become useless.