Tuesday, Tuesday, August 21, 2001, 11:52:13 PM, Lynn W. Taylor wrote: > Remember that certificates are about identification, not really about > encryption. > Mismatched names should be a HUGE red-flag. In this case, this was only an issue to provide a placeholder for people who (very rarely) might type in https://domain.com/ instead of using the links to the SSL site on the site's regular non-encrypted site. As for certs being about identification and not encryption, perhaps that was how they were intended, but the number of users who know anything about the identification properties of a cert are extremely few and far between. All they care about is the little lock in their browser. -- Best regards, William X Walsh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Userfriendly.com Domains The most advanced domain lookup tool on the net DNS Services from $1.65/mo
- How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Robert
- Re: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? William X Walsh
- Re: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Peter Kiem
- Re: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Peter Kiem
- Re[2]: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? William X Walsh
- RE: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Lynn W. Taylor
- RE: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? William X Walsh
- RE: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Lynn W. Taylor
- Re[2]: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? William X Walsh
- RE: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Lynn W. Taylor
- Re[2]: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? William X Walsh
- RE: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Lynn W. Taylor
- Re[2]: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? William X Walsh
- Re: Re[2]: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Robert
- RE: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Peter Kiem
- Re[2]: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? William X Walsh
- RE: Re[2]: How do webcerts work with virtual hosts? Bryan Waters
