On 12/08/17 00:50, voy...@sbt.net.au wrote:
> I've followed GhettoForge's Postfix page, so far so good
>
> but, I'm not that sure of getting dovecot22...
>
> do I need to do a 'yum shell --enablerepo=gf-plus', followed by install,
> run, quit; like for Postfix..?
Yes, I haven't done a dovecot pa
Am 11. August 2017 12:46:46 MESZ schrieb Ruben Safir :
>On 08/10/2017 04:41 PM, Frank-Ulrich Sommer wrote:
>> I can't see any security advantages of a self signed cert. I
>
>then you fail to understand the history, like when Microsoft's certs
>were undermined because the third party authenticatio
On Thu, August 10, 2017 6:35 pm, Peter wrote:
> GhettoForge has dovecot22 packages as well which provide the latest
> stable version of Dovecot for CentOS 6 and 7.
Peter, thanks.
I've followed GhettoForge's Postfix page, so far so good
but, I'm not that sure of getting dovecot22...
do I need t
On 11.08.2017 11:36, Michael Felt wrote:
> This is what Ralph means when he says "have been running a CA for
> 15+ years" - not that he is (though he could!) sell certificates
> commercially - rather, he is using an initial certificate to sign
> later certificates with.
Actually, I do sell certif
On 08/10/2017 04:41 PM, Frank-Ulrich Sommer wrote:
> add security exceptions this rings all alarm bells.
no, but software vendors will have you believe that. Sorry, I don't
leave my house keys with strangers
--
So many immigrant groups have swept through our town
that Brooklyn, like Atlantis,
On 08/10/2017 04:41 PM, Frank-Ulrich Sommer wrote:
> I can't see any security advantages of a self signed cert. I
then you fail to understand the history, like when Microsoft's certs
were undermined because the third party authentication agency gave the
keys to 2 guys that knocked on the door and
On 2017-08-11 11:36, Michael Felt wrote:
I have looked at let's encrypt. Key issue for me is having to add a
lot python stuff that would otherwise not be on any server.
I use acme.sh for all of my LetsEncrypt certs (web & mail), it is
written in pure shell script, so no python dependencies.
I have looked at let's encrypt. Key issue for me is having to add a lot
python stuff that would otherwise not be on any server.
Again, All CA's like "Let's Encrypt" - and others that are accepted by
the "majors", e.g., Windows, Mozilla make it much easier for the
"random" user to use anything