So far I understand the whole concept of public & private keys, but I guess my real question is in what situations would you use CA. The only scenario
that I've done so far is issue a certificate to my IIS webserver. In what
other cases can you use CA.
"Ben Smith" <online_bensmi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:MPG.1d6b1c2c28285674989801@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > In article <#wDIzUfoFHA.3312@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, coolromeo29
> @yahoo.com says...
>> By using Certification Authority on WIN2K3 server, does all data become
>> encrypted between those with certificates?
>>
>>
>>
>
> Not quite. Public and private keys (as well as generated session keys)
> are used by services for encryption and authentication. The MSPress
> Security+ book has a really good overview of how encryption works. (I
> wrote that chapter).
Re: CA, Certificates, some clearification ... No, the user certificate is stored on the AD user object, not the ...Private keys do not roam between machines for users unless you are using ... If the certificate is stored in> the user account, if the user moves between multiple machines, does he have> access to his public and private keys? ... > MMC on the server there is a pending request, why is it trying to create a> certificate for basic file encryption when i already have a certificate that> supports file encryption? ... (microsoft.public.win2000.security)
Re: E-mail encryption. Is this right? Isnt it a security hole? ... Regarding protecting your private keys, a good model is to never store your ... > When the receiver reads the encrypted e-mail uses his/her private key. ... > reads the CRL (Certificate Revocation List) from the Certificates CDP ... (microsoft.public.security)
Re: simple question about certificate chains ... Meant SSL of cource.... The key to the whole certificate idea is keeping private keys private!... You might be amazed at the effort that the certificate authorities such as ... (alt.computer.security)
Re: simple question about certificate chains ... Meant SSL of cource.... The key to the whole certificate idea is keeping private keys private!... You might be amazed at the effort that the certificate authorities such as ... (comp.security.ssh)
Re: P2P Authentication ... > use their private keys to encrypt data that they send to the other. ... resulting in the digital signature.... appropriate public key (taken from the recipient's trusted public key ... this digital certificate is digitally ... (comp.security.misc)