I'm not sure if I get you right. Are you using Fedora as a server operating system to provide radius authentication for your network infrastructure?
TLS1.2 is the currently newest and (hopefully) most secure version of the TLS protocol and therefore it is a good choice using it. So disabling TLS1.2 is a bad idea as stated in comment #26. Use a radius server version that implements TLS1.2 correctly instead.
Version 3.0.8 is affected when using EAP-TTLS as mentioned in comment #23 so if you have trouble use a different server version or a different EAP type.
If I've got you totally wrong and you are not the network operator ask your network operator to fix the problem and remove freeradius from your notebook/workstation.
I'm not sure if I get you right. Are you using Fedora as a server operating system to provide radius authentication for your network infrastructure?
TLS1.2 is the currently newest and (hopefully) most secure version of the TLS protocol and therefore it is a good choice using it. So disabling TLS1.2 is a bad idea as stated in comment #26. Use a radius server version that implements TLS1.2 correctly instead.
Version 3.0.8 is affected when using EAP-TTLS as mentioned in comment #23 so if you have trouble use a different server version or a different EAP type.
If I've got you totally wrong and you are not the network operator ask your network operator to fix the problem and remove freeradius from your notebook/ workstation.