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- Understanding Certificate Cross-Signing (Cross-Signature) in PKI - SSLTrust
Discover the nuances of certificate cross-signing and the potential pitfalls that arise from misconfigurations, legacy systems, and expired intermediates
- Cross-Signing and Alternate Trust Paths; How They Work
I'm very familiar with Let's Encrypt and their CA infrastructure so I'm going to use them to explain this as they have a cross-signed intermediate certificate This means I can give you some real examples to help understand what's going on which I hope will make this a little easier!
- What is Cross signing of root certificates and how does it help at time . . .
"A cross-certificate is a digital certificate issued by one Certificate Authority (CA) that is used to sign the public key for the root certificate of another Certificate Authority Cross-certificates provide a means to create a chain of trust from a single, trusted, root CA to multiple other CAs "
- openssl - cross sign certificate - Server Fault
Your new modified cert isn't issued by that CA and couldn't be revoked by that CA even if it knew about the new cert which it won't If the new cert is to be revoked at all, it must be on a CRL (and or OCSP) from your new CA
- What is Cross-signing? - ReasonLabs
Cross-signing in cybersecurity and antivirus is a process of digitally signing certificates with multiple certification authorities (CAs) to add an extra layer of security
- Cross Certificate Issue - MilitaryCAC
Administrators should either use InstallRoot or other approved method of distribution (such as GPO) This will prevent Microsoft from trying to build a path to a known issuer since all required certificates are present locally
- The Sign of the Cross – CERC - Catholic Education Resource Center
The sign of the cross was made from forehead to chest, and then from right shoulder to left shoulder with the right hand The thumb, forefinger, and middle fingers were held together to symbolize the Holy Trinity — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit
- Cross-Complaints, Counterclaims, and Impleader in California Civil . . .
Unlike federal courts, California uses a single, powerful device called the “cross-complaint” to bundle together all these related claims, but the rules about when and how to use it can be tricky
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