Everyone's talking about it: The Great Certificate Revocation Storm of 2014. Because of the Heartbleed bug, a very large number of SSL/TLS web sites need to revoke and reissue their certificates. The ...
Having your computer check for certificate revocation on a server tells you if the certificate being used has been revoked by the certificate authority before it was set to expire. Internet Explorer ...
2014 seems to be the year of the great certificate revocation debate. Revocation was always a sore subject with cryptoheads, but the noise level on the issue shot up to 11 this spring with the news of ...
This article was originally published on Scott Helme's blog and is reprinted here with his permission. We have a little problem on the web right now and I can only see it becoming a larger concern as ...
Aggressive adware applications that break the trust between HTTPS (HTTP Secure) websites and users have been at the center of controversy lately. But over the past week, HTTPS interception flaws of ...
As part of its response to the Flame malware and its usage of a forged Microsoft certificate to sign malicious files, Microsoft has changed the way that Windows handles certificates, releasing an ...
Certificates need to be revoked for all sorts of reasons, but the process is so slipshod, some propose an entirely new system. Why not just enforce existing rules instead? As much as I love public key ...
Netcraft reports that certificates on 80,000 of the half-million Web servers vulnerable to Heartbleed exploits have been revoked. The rush to revoke and replace digital certificates on ...
Users around the world have had trouble accessing some HTTPS websites due to an error at GlobalSign, one of the world’s largest certificate authorities. As part of ...
Aggressive adware applications that break the trust between HTTPS (HTTP Secure) websites and users have been at the center of controversy lately. But over the past week, HTTPS interception flaws of ...
Users around the world have had trouble accessing some HTTPS websites due to an error at GlobalSign, one of the world’s largest certificate authorities. As part of ...
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