Dear Sir or Madam
A certificate was created by our IT Manager using your software to access
our internal Help Desk website which hosts KeyStone application. Each time
we open the website we have a certificate notification saying You chose not
to trust this ... The entire error message is in
I was wondering if there has been any formal
security evaluation of the OpenSSL libraries
especially the crypto, either by itself or
in conjunction with any other product using
OpenSSL.
Apologies if this is the wrong forum for this
question.
-Suresh Chari
On Fri, May 24, 2002 at 11:52:24AM -0400, Suresh N Chari wrote:
I was wondering if there has been any formal
security evaluation of the OpenSSL libraries
especially the crypto, either by itself or
in conjunction with any other product using
OpenSSL.
Apologies if this is the wrong forum
On Fri, 24 May 2002 15:28:44 -0700 (PDT), john traenky wrote:
OpenSSL is the cornerstone for Open Source projects
using encryption. Has anyone done an analysis of what
legalities need doing to use it legally in the United
States? I have several charities and the like who'd
love to use it but
The first part of David's suggestion is correct: your best bet is to get
your own legal counsel.
If the charities want to deploy it for their own use, e.g., with Apache
so they can take donations over the net :), then disregard the license
exemption. Here, your primary concern is: does my