Internet SSL Survey 2010 is here! (blog post)
http://blog.ivanristic.com/2010/07/internet-ssl-survey-2010-is-here.html
Actual report:
Qualys Internet SSL Survey 2010 v1.6 (PDF, 3.2 MB)
http://blog.ivanristic.com/Qualys_SSL_Labs-State_of_SSL_2010-v1.6.pdf
=JeffH
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On Aug 2, 2010, at 4:19 PM, Paul Wouters wrote:
...Of course, TLS hasn't been successful in the sense that we care
about
most. TLS has had no impact on how users authenticate (we still send
usernames and passwords) to servers, and the way TLS authenticates
servers to users turns out to be very
> There is more than the UI at stake here, i.e. the basic functionality of
> the scheme. Say you distribute shares in a 4 out of 7 scheme (ABCDEF)
> and share A is published on the web. How do you recover from the
> remaining 3 out of 6 scheme into a 4 out of 6 scheme without having a
> key cer
Tanja Lange wrote:
There is more than the UI at stake here, i.e. the basic functionality of
the scheme. Say you distribute shares in a 4 out of 7 scheme (ABCDEF)
and share A is published on the web. How do you recover from the
remaining 3 out of 6 scheme into a 4 out of 6 scheme without having
Kaspersky: Sham Certificates Pose Big Problem for Windows Security
http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/70553.html
from above ..
Windows fails to clearly indicate when digital security certificates have been
tampered with, according to Kaspersky Lab's Roel Schouwenberg, and that
opens a door for
http://www.eff.org/observatory
"We have downloaded a dataset of all of the publicly-visible SSL
certificates, and will be making that data available to the research
community in the near future."
So, keep an eye on that page. The data is very useful. Many more interesting
conclusions remain to be
They tell me they will be releasing the data both raw and as a MySQL
database, so you can learn interesting things just by writing SQL queries.
> So, keep an eye on that page. The data is very useful. Many more
> interesting conclusions remain to be drawn from the data; once it's out
> (I'm told R
Anne & Lynn Wheeler wrote:
> Kaspersky: Sham Certificates Pose Big Problem for Windows Security
> http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/70553.html
>
> from above ..
>
> Windows fails to clearly indicate when digital security certificates
> have been tampered with, according to Kaspersky Lab's Roel