On 12/02/12 13:23 PM, Tim Moses wrote:
> I followed the link. What a joke! What do you do if you spot a crime in progress? Why? Post a blog, of course.
Actually, no, read the words. We tried to raise a stink at the time.
From memory, Mozilla did not respond. They never do when it is
legal/liability.
Sure, a few CAs responded (Eddy always does). But it isn't about one
CA. It is about the system of CAs - the other CAs were also doing the
same thing.
All that was left was to record the frustration. And move on.
> I've worked with Eddy for several years. And the suggestion that he is a criminal is laughable and defamatory.
>
> According to statements made on the thread, ALL commercial CAs are criminal.
lol... attack the claim at its premises and logic, not at whatever
salacious conclusion. That's the scientific thing :)
If a carding site is protected by an SSL certificate, is that a
certificate protecting a criminal site?
Is that certificate then participating in an unlawful activity?
And, if notified of this, does a CA feel obliged to do something?
or not?
The case at the time was that CAs seemed to decide not to do something
in that case. Mozilla seemed to agree by silence.
So the conclusion is the libertarian one: phishing, carding and such
things are adult behaviour and everyone should defend themselves. Now
look at Peter's claim about Trustwave.
> Do the priest and his accolytes purport to be scientists? All I see is lazy, unscientific, cynicism.
Big words, Tim.
So answer the question: what is your opinion on certificates being used
by criminal enterprises?
OK, don't stress yourself. Let's ask Symantec:
(iv) the Certificate information you provided (including your email
address) has not been and will not be used for any unlawful purpose;
http://www.verisign.com/repository/agreements/serverClass3Org.html