This is why we went with a Wildcard cert from Comodo.

 

Sean Rector, MCSE

 

From: Peter Johnson [mailto:peter.john...@peterstow.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 2:21 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: OWA / SSL question

 

Thanks for the compliment Greg J 

 

I've been through this several times and it is not fun. 

 

The troubles with self signed certs just outway the cost benefits even
though explaining that to the cheque signers can be difficult

 

From: Greg Wright [mailto:greg.wri...@wineselectors.com.au] 
Sent: 22 July 2009 00:51
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: OWA / SSL question

 

This is the best response I have read so far on this subject. Of
importance is the issue of mobile clients. Depending upon version, they
vary from easy to install an un-trusted Authorities certificate to being
impossible to install one.

 

Jonathan Link said "#2 is not necessarily true.  I did not install the
self-signed cert into my iPhone."

 

I am not sure about this being true, and would like to hear from others.
My experience and opinion of others in my immediate vicinity who have
set these up indicate that Self-Signed SSL certificates do not work with
iPhone (just as with WinMobiles). Maybe you aren't using SSL in your OWA
setup?

 

From: Peter Johnson [mailto:peter.john...@peterstow.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, 22 July 2009 2:28 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: OWA / SSL question

 

With regards to this issue I believe the following is true with a self
signed certificate

 

1.)    On the browsers the users would have to agree to continue to the
site everytime until they add the certificate to the machine. This is a
pain particularly with mobile users and OWA access from ad-hoc computers
such as Internet Kiosks etc.

2.)    Mobile phones using activesync will not work until the self
signed cert is installed onto the device.  This becomes an admin
overhead. 

 

The worst case is if you have to rebuild the server in disaster recovery
u generate a new certificate and the entire cycle starts all over again.
I've been through this and it's not fun!! 

 

With regards to certificates I've used Digicert a few times and always
had good results particularly with SAN certificates which you will need
for Exchange 2007 going forward.

 

Regards

Peter Johnson

 

 

 

 

From: Joe Heaton [mailto:jhea...@etp.ca.gov] 
Sent: 21 July 2009 16:46
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: OWA / SSL question

 

I know about GoDaddy, and recommend it every time any of our 4 SSL certs
come up for renewal.  But the manager wants to stay with the "industry
standard" Verisign.  I'm the kind of guy that buys the Shasta colas, or
the Sam's colas, because it's pretty much the same thing at half the
price.

 

I have also looked at generating our own cert, which really makes sense
for this purpose, as it's only internal users that will be accessing
OWA.  What could they face from home, if I use a homemade cert?  Are
there browser issues, with certain browsers not liking homemade certs?

 

Joe Heaton

Employment Training Panel

 

From: David Mazzaccaro [mailto:david.mazzacc...@hudsonhhc.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 8:42 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: OWA / SSL question

 

If your cert expires, users will have to either configure their browsers
to allow them to go the site, or click through warning/error messages to
get there.

I would believe depending on your mobile phone setup those users will
have similar problems.

Have you looked into generating your own internal certificate?

 

CHEAP: I got 3 year SSL Cert for OWA from GoDaddy.com for $67.47

 

 

 

 

________________________________

From: Joe Heaton [mailto:jhea...@etp.ca.gov] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2009 11:27 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: OWA / SSL question

Guys,

 

Due to the budget issues here in California, my agency is down to the
wire with renewing our SSL cert for Exchange.  I've already told my
manager that we can easily go with one of the cheaper alternatives, and
have the same security, but she's really wanting to stick with Verisign.
Due to this, our SSL cert may end up expiring.  I've told her that the
impact would be that I would have to turn off OWA.  In addition,
wouldn't our phones be affected?  We're using Activesync on our Windows
Mobile devices, and requiring the SSL connection.  Would we be able to
make a secure SSL connection without the cert?  I'm thinking this is
possibly a stupid question, but my brain is really fuzzy this morning.

 

Joe Heaton

AISA

Employment Training Panel

1100 J Street, 4th Floor

Sacramento, CA  95814

(916) 327-5276

jhea...@etp.ca.gov

 


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