What SSL Certificate Authorities require is screwed up as it is. If you want to sign up, you need to provide proof of your identity. This comes from different sources, such as Duns and Bradstreet number, some official letterhead, proof (paper mail or phone) that your domain name registration is valid and matches your offical address, etc.
My problem occured when trying to get a cert for a small group of alumni. We've got about 50 people in it. We're just trying to make it possible for us to discuss things on our bulletin board with passwords protected with SSL.
We payed our money to Entrust. We still have not gotten a certificate or a refund. They first required that we prove we have a relationship with the school. We aren't an official organization, don't pretend to, and don't use their domain at all. It's completely separate.
So next they required we show articles of our encorporation. Is this what's required to have a certificate? Why can't joe-random-webmaster have a valid certificate from the "big guys"? Sure,
you can go with smaller outfits, but their certs aren't in older browsers.
IMHO, a cert should simply say "This cert was given to the folks who run www.this_domain.com." They can check and verify whois data and your ability to receive email. Any other requirements are just stupid. Just because you want SSL doesn't mean you want to be an e-commerce site.
My problem occured when trying to get a cert for a small group of alumni. We've got about 50 people in it. We're just trying to make it possible for us to discuss things on our bulletin board with passwords protected with SSL.
We payed our money to Entrust. We still have not gotten a certificate or a refund. They first required that we prove we have a relationship with the school. We aren't an official organization, don't pretend to, and don't use their domain at all. It's completely separate.
So next they required we show articles of our encorporation. Is this what's required to have a certificate? Why can't joe-random-webmaster have a valid certificate from the "big guys"? Sure, you can go with smaller outfits, but their certs aren't in older browsers.
IMHO, a cert should simply say "This cert was given to the folks who run www.this_domain.com." They can check and verify whois data and your ability to receive email. Any other requirements are just stupid. Just because you want SSL doesn't mean you want to be an e-commerce site.