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  2. Certification path validation algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certification_path...

    If any check fails on any certificate, the algorithm terminates and path validation fails. (This is an explanatory summary of the scope of the algorithm, not a rigorous reproduction of the detailed steps.) The public key algorithm and parameters are checked; The current date/time is checked against the validity period of the certificate;

  3. List of HTTP status codes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_status_codes

    The request was well-formed (i.e., syntactically correct) but could not be processed. [1]: §15.5.21 423 Locked (WebDAV; RFC 4918) The resource that is being accessed is locked. [7] 424 Failed Dependency (WebDAV; RFC 4918) The request failed because it depended on another request and that request failed (e.g., a PROPPATCH). [7]

  4. EJBCA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EJBCA

    EJBCA (formerly: Enterprise JavaBeans Certificate Authority) is a free software public key infrastructure (PKI) certificate authority software package maintained and sponsored by the Swedish for-profit company PrimeKey Solutions AB, which holds the copyright to most of the codebase, being a subsidiary for Keyfactor Inc. based in United States.

  5. Online Certificate Status Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_Certificate_Status...

    Alice and Bob have public key certificates issued by Carol, the certificate authority (CA). Alice wishes to perform a transaction with Bob and sends him her public key certificate. Bob, concerned that Alice's private key may have been compromised, creates an 'OCSP request' that contains Alice's certificate serial number and sends it to Carol.

  6. Certificate revocation list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_revocation_list

    This reversible status can be used to note the temporary invalidity of the certificate (e.g., if the user is unsure if the private key has been lost). If, in this example, the private key was found and nobody had access to it, the status could be reinstated, and the certificate is valid again, thus removing the certificate from future CRLs.

  7. Certificate Transparency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_Transparency

    An example of Certificate Transparency entry on Firefox 89. In 2011, a reseller of the certificate authority Comodo was attacked and the certificate authority DigiNotar was compromised, [19] demonstrating existing flaws in the certificate authority ecosystem and prompting work on various mechanisms to prevent or monitor unauthorized certificate ...

  8. X.509 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X.509

    An EV certificate means a certificate was issued for a domain like example.com, and a company like Example, LLC is the owner of the domain, and the owner was verified by Articles of Incorporation. Extended validation does not add any additional security controls, so the secure channel setup using an EV certificate is not "stronger" than a ...

  9. Self-signed certificate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-signed_certificate

    When the certificate is presented for an entity to validate, they first verify the hash of the certificate matches the reference hash in the white-list, and if they match (indicating the self-signed certificate is the same as the one that was formerly trusted) then the certificate's validity dates can be trusted.