There's a company called StartCom (http://www.startssl.com/) who will
do 2-year validity wildcard certs, upon verification of your identity
and verification that you have control of the domain for which you are
requesting certificates.

Oh, and they're included in the latest Microsoft Root Certificate Update
for Windows XP, and all later versions; Firefox recognizes them, they're
part of Apple's certificate store, and it's pretty much only Opera who
doesn't recognize them for whatever reason.

-Kyle H

On 7/23/10 6:24 PM, Mounir IDRASSI wrote:
>  Hi,
>
> All major commercial CAs do provide wildcard SSL certificates and the
> price is usually high.
> Googling gives the following links for Comodo, Thawte and Verisign :
>    - http://www.comodo.com/e-commerce/ssl-certificates/wildcard-ssl.php
>    - http://www.thawte.com/ssl/wildcard-ssl-certificates/
>    - http://www.verisign.com/ssl-certificates/wildcard-ssl-certificates/
>
> Cheers,
> -- 
> Mounir IDRASSI
> IDRIX
> http://www.idrix.fr
>
>
> On 7/24/2010 2:02 AM, Luis Daniel Lucio Quiroz wrote:
>> Just wondering
>>
>> who i must do request for a wildcard cert, for example to accept all the
>> *.mydomain.com
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> LD
>> ______________________________________________________________________
>> OpenSSL Project                                 http://www.openssl.org
>> User Support Mailing List                    openssl-users@openssl.org
>> Automated List Manager                           majord...@openssl.org
>
> ______________________________________________________________________
> OpenSSL Project                                 http://www.openssl.org
> User Support Mailing List                    openssl-users@openssl.org
> Automated List Manager                           majord...@openssl.org


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