And we've never talked about revocation because the SSL certificates were quickly revoked.
And it must have an SSL certificate signed by somebody who your browser trusts.
Is it time to consider 2048 bits for standard SSL certificates?
You may be trying to connect to a server that just doesn't have an SSL certificate.
X.509 is just a standard formatting for SSL certificates that's industry wide.
I understand an SSL certificate verifies the identity of my server.
Cost of purchasing SSL certificates is no longer an issue, thanks to that.
You ought to be able to verify the credentials of the page by looking at the SSL certificate and go through the whole thing, yes.
Local mode: It would not have any problems related to SSL certificates.
So they haven't - they have an SSL certificate, and they've signed it themselves.