Digital certificates and digital signatures provide the building blocks to add privacy, authentication, and data integrity to online business.
What is Public Key Cryptography?
What is Public Key Infrastructure?
What is a Certificate and a Qualified Certificate?
A Qualified Certificate is a special kind of Certificate that:
- contains a minimum set of elements that are specified in the European Directive (99/93/EC); and
- is produced by a Qualified CSP which meets the specific technical and procedural requirements that are also spelled out in the Directive.
What are a Certification Authority (CA) and Certificate Service Provider (CSP)?
What is an Advanced Electronic Signature?
- it is uniquely linked to the signatory;
- it is capable of identifying the signatory;
- it is created using means that the signatory can maintain under his sole control; and
- it is linked to the data to which it relates in such a manner that any subsequent change of the data is detectable.
What is a Qualified Electronic Signature?
- Be an Advanced Electronic Signature as define in the Directive. Currently, only PKI digital signatures (using asymmetric cryptography) fulfil those requirements;
- Be based on a Qualified Certificate (QC) issued by a suitably certified Certification Service Provider (CSP); and
- Be created Secure Signature‐Creation Device (SSCD) that meets specific functional conditions which are also laid down in the Directive.
What is an Extended Validation (EV) SSL certificate and how does it differ from other forms of SSL?
Most current-generation browsers recognise the value of EV by providing specific indicators (such as the “green bar” in IE7) and enhanced security reports that highlight the name and address of the website owner, as well as the CA that issued the certificate.
Other forms of SSL are commonly known as “domain validation” (in which control of the domain in established) or “organisation validation” (in which the Subject is identified). However, each CA followed different practises in issuing these certificates, which were all displayed in the same way by browsers regardless of the quality of the validation.
What is Wildcard?
- www.yourdomain.com
- mail.yourdomain.com
- intranet.yourdomain.com
- secure.yourdomain.com
- servername.yourdomain.com
However, Wildcard Certificates do not work for multiple level subdomains. For example a Wildcard for *.yourdomain.com will not work on www.secure.yourdomain.com or server.name.yourdomain.com. The advantage of a Wildcard certificate is that you only need one certificate to secure multiple subdomains rather than buying and managing multiple certificates.
Be aware that some mobile devices don’t support wildcard certificates including Windows Mobile 5. For these devices you will need to use a SAN (Subject Alternative Name) Certificate. To secure different domain names or multiple level subdomains in one certificate you should consider a SAN (Subject Alternative Name) SSL Certificate.
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What is a SAN Certificate?
For example, one SAN SSL Certificate could secure cover the following:
- yourdomian.com
- mail.yourdomain.com
- autodiscover.yourdomain.com
- anotherdomain.com
- anotherdomain.net
A SAN Certificate (also called a UC Certificate) is required for some functions in MS Exchange Server 2007 and Office Communications Server 2007 as well as and Live Communications Server 2005.
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Do I need to reinstall the seal after renewing my HydrantID SSL certificate?
Can I customise the HydrantID seal?
How to report a problem with a HydrantID seal?
- Missing security information when clicked
- Mismatched information displaed by the seal and the SSL Certificate
- Possible use for phishing or other illegal activities