On Wed, Jan 28, 2009 at 5:14 AM, William Soley william.so...@sun.com wrote:
On Jan 27, 2009, at 6:04 AM, Jerry Leichter wrote:
It might be useful to put together a special-purpose HTTPS client which
would initiate a connection and tell you about the cert returned, then exit.
I use ...
I just received a phishing email, allegedly from HSBC:
Dear HSBC Member,
So did the link have a EV cert?
Hardly matters. HSBC has vast numbers of web servers all over the world,
some with EV certs, some without.
For example, their US customer site for deposit customers at
On Sun, Jan 25, 2009 at 11:04 PM, Jerry Leichter leich...@lrw.com wrote:
I just received a phishing email, allegedly from HSBC:
Dear HSBC Member,
Due to the high number of fraud attempts and phishing scams, it has been
decided to
implement EV SSL Certification on this Internet
On Jan 27, 2009, at 6:04 AM, Jerry Leichter wrote:
It might be useful to put together a special-purpose HTTPS client
which would initiate a connection and tell you about the cert
returned, then exit.
I use ...
openssl s_client -connect www.whatever.com:443 -showcerts
Ships with
On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 09:04:45AM -0500, Jerry Leichter wrote:
[...]
It might be useful to put together a special-purpose HTTPS client
which would initiate a connection and tell you about the cert
returned, then exit.
[...]
I often use this (though there's probably an easier way)...
I just received a phishing email, allegedly from HSBC:
Dear HSBC Member,
Due to the high number of fraud attempts and phishing scams, it
has been decided to
implement EV SSL Certification on this Internet Banking website.
The use of EV SSL certification works with high