It's becoming clearer that CAcert isn't going to be passing a third
party audit any time soon. Our only view into it is the open-source code
they've made available, and messy wiki documentation. The quality of the
code is not exactly comforting - whoever wrote most of it didn't seem to
be aware of prepared statements...

Unfortunately, it's true. But note that you will *never* know if these "profesionally" "audited" SSL issuers are aware of prepared statements or not. I don't want to name the company that I used to use which has an always-failing admin panel where you never know what the button is going to do every time you click it. No docs can help it.

I would tend to trust CAcert more than anyone else if only their code was clean. Because it's not I consider them as risky as "professional" SSL issuers where you never know what's behind the scenes. Internets really need commerce-, government- and regulation-free SSL issuers like CAcert. Hope they HTFU and get their code written well some day.

--
Kind regards,
Damian Nowak
StratusHost
www.AtlasHost.eu

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