Oh, and this fantastic news lines up nicely with your other thread "how
to report stolen/compromised certificate?" at
the mozilla.dev.security.policy mailing list. The irony that you can
request to have your certificate revoked, but the owner of the domain
portugalmail.pt can not.
I suggest to add another item to the Mozilla CA Policies that:
A) CAs are required to accept revocation requests by third parties and
investigate any request
B) CAs are required to revoked certificates upon key comprise and
wrongful issuance
--
Regards
Signer: Eddy Nigg, StartCom Ltd.
XMPP: star...@startcom.org
Blog: http://blog.startcom.org/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/eddy_nigg
And, you're still certain that on the other hand the procedure for code
signing cert is totally sure ?
From you other message :
> Verisign was supposed to disable those email addresses. We've been
> discussion this issue to death already and Verisign committed to it.
> Apparently they haven't done so, despite their commitment.
If there was such a commitment, then Mozilla should take action.
Apparently Verisign did perform that action and the certificate in
question was obtained at the 18th of February.
Verisign did what ? They removed support for such generic addresses
since the 18th ?
No, apparently the removed some of those addresses since the 6th of
March. The certificate was obtained at the 18th of February. See bug 556468
Kurt, the best group for sending this and also to continue the
discussion would be mozilla.dev.security.policy
From a cryptographic point of view, nothing was broken. It's the policy
that's bad.
Yes, I saw that and also the following in-between :
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=477783
Gervase Markham [:gerv] 2009-04-06 04:28:40 PDT
I agree that it would be good for CAs to come to agreement on a
limited set of addresses to be used.
Gervase Markham [:gerv] 2009-04-07 04:26:20 PDT
Give me a couple of weeks to get consensus on a list :-)
It wasn't good, it was required.
One point the people complaining CNNIC was accepted don't get is "can we
objectively claim it's certain that the occidental CAs respect a higher
standard than CNNIC ?"
I've been fighting for various improvements during the last few years
and I believe I was proven right again and again. Unfortunately it's
many times only AFTER something happens, not BEFORE.
> One point the people complaining CNNIC was accepted don't get is "can
> we objectively claim it's certain that the occidental CAs respect a
> higher standard than CNNIC ?"
I suggest not to mix the two issues, which are entirely different. And
you can expect that there are various different problems which have to
be addressed, one problem doesn't legitimate another. We should stay
clearly focused on the different tasks we have.
I don't know what you mean by "occidental CAs" but if you mean "all
the other CAs" then you have missed the point. It is not a question
of whether we simply hold all CAs to the same standard, but whether
our standard is sufficient. It may well be that both the CNNIC
approval *and* other prior approvals do not meet a sufficient level of
trust to be accepted. Examining CNNIC should not be dismissed simply
because we may have made the same mistakes elsewhere.
In any case, Eddy is right... these are really two different issues.
Sorry, that was me... juggling too many different google accounts.