Hmm, interesting!
That means that they are actually in possession of your private key? Doesn't
sound like the ideal solution to me. There are times when key recovery/key
escrow procedures would demand a central repository of private keys, but in
this case it seems a bit dangerous, or am I just par
ses inline.
On Mon, Aug 04, 2003, Werner Johansson wrote:
> Hi list!
>
> (Tried posting this a few days back, but it got lost in the process,
> trying again...)
>
> I have been experimenting with the OCSP "client" in OpenSSL, using a
> command line like this
Hi list!
(Tried posting this a few days back, but it got lost in the process,
trying again...)
I have been experimenting with the OCSP "client" in OpenSSL, using a
command line like this:
openssl ocsp -issuer level3ca.cer -cert enduser1.cer -url
http://ocsp-test -CAfile cafile.pem
OpenSSL versi