yes, but have you dealt with Equifax? my current log with them shows 4
emails and 2 voice messages that have yet to even acknowledged; much less
responded too. its real easy to become a 'reseller' for them; just do not
expect them to do anything but ignore you.
i placed 2 cert orders with them. the first was lost, no charge was made,
and no acknowledgement of the request was received. the second time i did
the document dance again, and again received no reply nor acknowledgement
or the order. seven days later i sent a bitchy email, and within 4 hours
received my cert with an auto-response form letter.
after they did not reply to the next 3 emails i sent them, i called twice
and left voice mail. then i sent another email a week later. nothing but
silence from them.
at this point, i would not trust Equifax to cross the street.
jonathan
At 03:12 PM 8/4/01 +0300, Sergei Kolodka wrote:
>Dave,
>
>You can just get one * cert for five hundred dollars if you don't like
>five :)
>
>http://www.equifaxsecure.com/digitalcertificates/dc_webservcert.html
>
>
>DW> I don't have five hundred dollars laying around to get five certs for my
>DW> servers, all of which answer to several hostnames under
>DW> *.devilsplayground.net. The apps I use need to have a root URL of / they
>DW> cannot sit under /appname/ so as a result, vhosts is the only way to go.
>
>DW> ----- Original Message -----
>DW> From: "Jim McAtee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>DW> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>DW> Sent: Friday, August 03, 2001 5:31 PM
>DW> Subject: Re: Web certificate pricing?
>
>
> >> Either start making a profit by selling those customers their own
> >> certificates (as many would argue they should have been forced to do in
>DW> the
> >> first place), or else hang their stores off of the other end of your URL
>DW> by
> >> placing them in subdirectories. I don't see much advantage to using
> >> subdomains, since it's still a cert that has been issued to
>DW> "netmonger.net"
> >> and says nothing about the actual business using the cert.