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  2. California Senate Bill 277 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Senate_Bill_277

    The final version of the bill was enacted by the California Legislature in 2015 (passing the State Assembly on a 46–31 vote [1] [2] and the California State Senate on a 24–14 vote [2]) and was signed into law by Governor Jerry Brown on June 30, 2015. [2] [3]

  3. Certificate authority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_authority

    In large-scale deployments, Alice may not be familiar with Bob's certificate authority (perhaps they each have a different CA server), so Bob's certificate may also include his CA's public key signed by a different CA 2, which is presumably recognizable by Alice. This process typically leads to a hierarchy or mesh of CAs and CA certificates.

  4. California Public Records Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Public_Records_Act

    The California Public Records Act (Statutes of 1968, Chapter 1473; currently codified as Division 10 of Title 1 of the California Government Code) [1] was a law passed by the California State Legislature and signed by governor Ronald Reagan in 1968 requiring inspection or disclosure of governmental records to the public upon request, unless exempted by law.

  5. Self-signed certificate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-signed_certificate

    Special treatment of X.509 certificate fields for self-signed certificate can be found in RFC 3280. [1] Revocation of self-signed certificates differs from CA-signed certificates. By nature, no entity (CA or others) can revoke a self-signed certificate. But one could invalidate a self-signed CA by removing it from the trust whitelist. [3]

  6. 1978 California Proposition 13 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978_California_Proposition_13

    Between Proposition 58 and 1996 Proposition 193, which extends Proposition 58 to grandparents, a 2017 report from California's Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) found that roughly one out of 20 houses statewide received the exemption in the decade ending in 2015, at an average rate of one out of every 200 houses per year. They estimated total ...

  7. California High School Exit Exam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_High_School...

    Prior to the CAHSEE, the high school exit exams in California were known as the High School Competency Exams and were developed by each district pursuant to California law. In 1999, California policy-makers voted to create the CAHSEE in order to have a state exam that was linked to the state’s new academic content standards. [4]

  8. California Just Passed the Country's First Clothing Recycling ...

    www.aol.com/california-just-passed-countrys...

    Governor Gavin Newsom recently signed SB 707, the Responsible Textile Recovery Act. The new law requires a clothing, apparel and textile extended producer responsibility (EPR) program, as defined ...

  9. CAcert.org - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAcert.org

    CAcert.org is a community-driven certificate authority that issues free X.509 public key certificates. [1] CAcert.org relies heavily on automation and therefore issues only Domain-validated certificates (and not Extended validation or Organization Validation certificates).