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Subject: Re[2]: OT: cheap CA certificates
Thawte is pretty cheap. $127 bucks through their ISP channel (anyone
can sign up) for a regular web cert, I am not sure you can do much better.
If it's not worth $127 a year, then I assume it's not for profit, e.g.
for internal use onl
Thawte is pretty cheap. $127 bucks through their ISP channel (anyone
can sign up) for a regular web cert, I am not sure you can do much better.
If it's not worth $127 a year, then I assume it's not for profit, e.g.
for internal use only or for a small number of users. In that case,
just use self-s
http://www.sslreview.com/content/index.html
__
Apache Interface to OpenSSL (mod_ssl) www.modssl.org
User Support Mailing List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Automated List Manager
Hello Eric,
Eric Wood wrote:
Where can I get cheap/reliable certs for a Apache that IE 5.5+ clients will
authorize against? Thawte and Verisign have outpriced themselves.
That depends on your definition of the terms cheap and reliable.
But we offer client and server certs
(low level client certs
http://www.geotrust.com/equifax/
On Mon, Nov 17, 2003 at 02:33:53PM -0500, Eric Wood wrote:
> From: "Eric Wood" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: OT: cheap CA certificates
> Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 14:33:53 -0500
> Reply-To: [EMAIL
Where can I get cheap/reliable certs for a Apache that IE 5.5+ clients will
authorize against? Thawte and Verisign have outpriced themselves.
-Eric Wood
__
Apache Interface to OpenSSL (mod_ssl) www.modssl.org
U
Does mod_ssl have to have "SSLCACertificatePath and or File" to authenticate
a verisign test client certificate?
How To page reads
"SSLVerifyClient none
SSLVerifyClient require
SSLVerifyDepth 5
SSLCACertificateFile conf/ssl.crt/ca.crt
SSLCACertificatePath conf/ssl.crt
SSLOptions +Fake
liff Woolley
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Sent: Wednesday, August 09, 2000 3:20
PMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: Re: SSL CA
certificates
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/09/00 02:02PM
>>>>If I obtain an SSL certificate from a top level CA (like
Verisign, for>instance),
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/09/00 02:02PM If
I obtain an SSL certificate from a top level CA (like Verisign,
for>instance), can I then issue other certificates using MY cert as the
CA cert?>Will browsers then execute a chain look up back to Verisign to
satisfy the>validity of the cert?
Nope
If I obtain an SSL certificate from a top level CA (like Verisign, for
instance), can I then issue other certificates using MY cert as the CA cert?
Will browsers then execute a chain look up back to Verisign to satisfy the
validity of the cert?
> Robert T. Stutes
>
> Robert Stutes
> Senior Unix
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