On Sun, 25 Feb 1996 22:48:51 -0600 (CST), you wrote:
On the 23rd, Jeff Weinstein said this concerning the natural semi-anonymity of the net:
Given that verisign and others will soon begin issuing large numbers of certificates that do not guarantee the identity of the key holder, it seems that this tradition will continue even with the wide deployment of X509 certs.
This has been bugging me since I read it. I'm not sure I understand the plan; it only makes sense to me if "anonymous" X.509 certs are issued for user authentication only, not for server authentication. Is that what this is about?
(If anonymous certs are issued for servers, why should such a cert be treated any differently than one I generate on my own, which causes warning screens about an unknown CA to pop up?)
Verisign will offer a number of levels of certificates. The certificate that Jeff refered to requires only a unique email address and is available for free. For obvious reasons you should not trust theses keys for credit card information or anything else that you feel is confidential. This is why Navigator allows you configure what keys you accept as well as what certifications you will accept. Dan Weinstein djw@vplus.com http://www.vplus.com/~djw PGP public key is available from my Home Page. All opinions expressed above are mine. "I understand by 'freedom of Spirit' something quite definite - the unconditional will to say No, where it is dangerous to say No. Friedrich Nietzsche