it's not present either in firefox or IE.

On Mon, Jan 12, 2009 at 4:26 AM, Peter Manis <[email protected]> wrote:
> CAcert is in Firefox, but unless Microsoft did a big update they aren't
> going to be in IE, which still means you need to pay for a cert if it is a
> customer facing site.  Last couple times I tried to login to my CAcert
> account I was presented with an invalid cert notice so I don't even know if
> it is valid in Firefox anymore.  There used to be benefits to paying for
> Verisign, like browser compatibility, but now the main one is just the trust
> circle.  Verisign does more than most companies to verify the identity and
> background of the company/individual requesting the cert, unless other
> companies are stepping it up.  I would probably pay the extra to be in the
> circle if I was a profitable business.
>
> On Mon, Jan 12, 2009 at 5:28 AM, Roger E. Rustad, Jr.
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Dante Lanznaster wrote:
>> > Please note that there are quite a few CA's out there that issue "free
>> > certs" but these are free as in beer, and what they provide is a
>> > 1-month eval certificate. Of course you can just renew it, but it's a
>> > PITA procedure to do every month.
>>
>> Why not just get a certified RHCE from India to do that for $3/hr?
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>
>
> --
> Peter Manis
> (678) 269-7979
>
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