On Tue, 14 May 2002, Franck Martin wrote:
[snip]
> Who can't see that this message is digitaly signed and do you know why?
I can see that it is signed, but pine doesn't know what to do with an
"Application/X-PKCS7-SIGNATURE" bodypart.
--
Mark H. Wood, Lead System Programmer [EMAIL
: Tuesday, 14 May 2002 10:44
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: Which product to buy?
Franck,
Well two things.
1. When I get some of these signed messages (not just yours) and when
those
have certs my system doesn't like, this can make outlook hang. I expect
win32 things to ha
10:25
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: Which product to buy?
On Tue, 14 May 2002, Franck Martin wrote:
> BTW:
> Who can't see that this message is digitaly signed and do you know
why?
PINE tells me that there is a PKCS#7 attachment, but I don't have the
t
Does anybody sell certificate that allow you to sign certificates?
Will there be still a trust problem
A signs B that signs C
User X trust A and receives C, is C trusted too?
If B expires, but C dates are still ok, and I renew B (with which opennssl command by the way) is C still va
>I like to buy a certificate from verisign or thawte that allows me to
>sign other certificates. The test certificate produced have the
>extension CA:FALSE. I'm not sure if I can sign anything with this kind
>of certificate, please advise...
No you can't sign anything with that.
What you need is
On Mon, 13 May 2002, Franck Martin wrote:
> I like to buy a certificate from verisign or thawte that allows me to
> sign other certificates. The test certificate produced have the
> extension CA:FALSE. I'm not sure if I can sign anything with this kind
> of certificate, please advise...
No. Thes
I'm confused here...
I like to buy a certificate from verisign or thawte that allows me to
sign other certificates. The test certificate produced have the
extension CA:FALSE. I'm not sure if I can sign anything with this kind
of certificate, please advise...
What happens when the certificate exp