I agree with Mads and am also supportive of a ballot that removes 3.2.2.4.5 and 
adds some more detail to 3.2.2.4.1.

 

Doug

 

From: Public [mailto:public-boun...@cabforum.org] On Behalf Of Mads Egil 
Henriksveen via Public
Sent: Wednesday, January 3, 2018 7:11 AM
To: Jeremy Rowley <jeremy.row...@digicert.com>; CA/Browser Forum Public 
Discussion List <public@cabforum.org>; geo...@apple.com
Subject: Re: [cabfpub] Verification of Domain Contact and Domain Authorization 
Document

 

 

Then I think we should change the requirements. 

 

As a representative for a CA with a background in strong identity validation 
(both for natural and legal persons) I find these examples from Ryan and Jeremy 
to represent a very bad practice. If this really reflects the current practice 
in the industry, we need to tighten up the requirements and make them much more 
specific.

 

>From my point of view (and with my background) I find method 3.2.2.4.1 useful. 
>We must remember that the domain validation methods also are used for EV (and 
>not only OV) and when we have a strongly validated and verified organization 
>(e.g. based on the EV requirements) it makes sense to allow for the 
>organization to apply for certificates including domain names owned by the 
>organization itself. 

 

I understand that there are doubts about how to ensure that the organization 
really owns the domain (like in Jeremy’s example), but it should not be too 
hard to “strengthen” the link between the applicant and the domain owner in 
terms of rewriting section 3.2.2.4.1. A match in the organization name only 
should of course not be allowed. 

 

In Norway every organization is given a unique organization number by a 
national authority and in the registry for the TLD=.no domains (see 
www.norid.no <http://www.norid.no> ) we find this organization number as a part 
of the domain name registrant information. In such cases, we allow for issuance 
based on 3.2.2.4.1 if the domain name registrant information exactly match 
organization information (i.e. by country, organization name and organization 
number).  I think this is a reasonable use case for method 3.2.2.4.1. 

 

Personally I am more concerned about the possibility we give to any stakeholder 
in the ecosystem who takes a role in controlling a domain to get an OV (and EV) 
certificate based on domain control only. This was discussed also in the F2F 
meeting in Bilbao last year – see 
https://cabforum.org/2016/05/25/2016-05/#The-Role-of-Identity-in-TLS-Certificates.

 

Therefore, I am supportive for a ballot which removes 3.2.2.4.5 and keep 
3.2.2.4.1 but strengthen this up to allow for use cases like the one described 
above.

 

Regards

Mads  

 

From: Public [mailto:public-boun...@cabforum.org] On Behalf Of Jeremy Rowley 
via Public
Sent: onsdag 3. januar 2018 05:47
To: geo...@apple.com; CA/Browser Forum Public Discussion List 
<public@cabforum.org>
Subject: Re: [cabfpub] Verification of Domain Contact and Domain Authorization 
Document

 

I disagree. The requirements do not specify that.  All that is required is the 
name of the applicant was verified under 3.2.2.1 and that the register specify 
the domain contact is the applicant. If Google, Inc. is specified as the domain 
contact, no address matching is required.

 

From: geo...@apple.com <mailto:geo...@apple.com>  [mailto:geo...@apple.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 2, 2018 4:34 PM
To: Jeremy Rowley <jeremy.row...@digicert.com 
<mailto:jeremy.row...@digicert.com> >; CA/Browser Forum Public Discussion List 
<public@cabforum.org <mailto:public@cabforum.org> >
Cc: Ryan Sleevi <sle...@google.com <mailto:sle...@google.com> >; Adriano 
Santoni <adriano.sant...@staff.aruba.it <mailto:adriano.sant...@staff.aruba.it> 
>
Subject: Re: [cabfpub] Verification of Domain Contact and Domain Authorization 
Document

 

 

 

On Dec 22, 2017, at 12:09 PM, Jeremy Rowley via Public <public@cabforum.org 
<mailto:public@cabforum.org> > wrote:

 

The attack vector is easier than that. 

1.      I use very stringent processes to verify that Google, Inc. is a legit 
company in Utah.
2.      I verify that Jeremy did indeed incorporate Google, Inc. 
3.      I call Jeremy at the phone listed for Google, Inc., the Utah corporation
4.      The domain information shows Google, Inc. as owning  
<http://google.com/> google.com
5.      Certificate issues.

 

Obviously this would be caught in every CA’s high risk checks, but the point 
remains valid. Regardless of the expertise and thoroughness of the org check, 
the specs lack any time between the verified org and the actual domain because 
orgs are not unique on a global basis.

 

 

For item 4, you have to verify that “the Applicant is the Domain Contact”.  
Obviously it’s insufficient to just compare names—you must verify every element 
of the WHOIS contact matches the Applicant, that’s typically name, postal 
address, phone number, and e-mail.

 

Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature

_______________________________________________
Public mailing list
Public@cabforum.org
https://cabforum.org/mailman/listinfo/public

Reply via email to