If you don't need a trusted signature, then you can use OpenSSL to create your own certificates. The only issue with this is that there is no trusted third party to verify the certificate if valid. For most home use or small business situations, this isn't a problem. But of course, you're the best judge of that.
Shawn -----Original Message----- From: Marcin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 12:16 PM To: clug-talk Subject: (clug-talk) SSL Certificates Can you guys recommend me an SSL Certificate provider? According to info from http://www.whichssl.com/ , Comodo InstantSSL Pro seems to be a reasonable balance between the price and the functionality. I admit this post may be a little bit off-topic; unfortunately the server Windoze-based, BUT some of the customers will be using Opera, Konqueror etc. and I want to make it a Linux friendly environment. It's going to be a new library catalogue by the way. Thanks! -- Marcin
