Definitely not. Your private key is your own.  Certificate signing is
just a way of vouching for your identity, nothing more. You can use
self-signed certs if you're that concerned about it, but I wouldn't
recommend it if compatibility is an issue.

On Mon, Jul 28, 2008 at 1:16 PM, Phibo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi
>
> Is it possible for a certificate authority (CA) signing my SSL certificate 
> signing request (csr) to decrypt my own SSL sessions ? Or, in other words, in 
> a csr are there enough infos about my private key to be able to intercept SSL 
> sessions encrypted by my public key ?
>
> Thanks and Cheers,
> Phibo
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