a new free smime service, but...
Uwe Brauer
oub at mat.ucm.es
Wed Oct 23 14:49:16 CEST 2019
> MFPA via Gnupg-users wrote in <1171562612.20191022004056 at my_localhost_AR>:
> |On Sunday 20 October 2019 at 3:20:41 PM, in
> |<mid:87a79vsdl2.fsf at mat.ucm.es>, Uwe Brauer via Gnupg-users wrote:-
> |
> |> I just found that
> |> https://extrassl.actalis.it/portal/uapub/doProcess
> |
> |> Provides a free smime certificate.
> ...
> |> does somebody know whether there is a security
> |> breach, the way this
> |> certificate was generated?
> |
> |I'm no expert but their Certificate Policy reads to me that the
> |private key is compromised right from the start. I think usually the
> I think it is common that S/MIME and SSL certificates are
> delivered via PKCS12, including the private key. You then seem to
> extract the individual things like
I think this is a severe security breach. The private key should never
leave your computer.
> $ openssl pkcs12 -in cert.p12 -out certpem.pem -clcerts -nodes
> $ # Alternatively
> $ openssl pkcs12 -in cert.p12 -out cert.pem -clcerts -nokeys
> $ openssl pkcs12 -in cert.p12 -out key.pem -nocerts -nodes
> |keys are generated on the subscriber's device and only the public key
> |goes to the CA to be certified.
> This is possible via CACert.org, at least still (out of money).
> You create your local signing request, and the private key.pem never
> leaves your own box:
> $ openssl req -nodes -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout key.pem -out creq.pem
> (Ensure all email addresses of desire are included in the web
> form.)
> Unfortunate that besides Comodo there seems no other provider of
> free S/MIME certificates. You can only self-sign, and provide
Comodo does not offer this any more. At the beginning of the year they
reduced the smime cerificates validity from 1 year to 1 month, now they
withdraw it all together.
> a safe transport for a certificate to compare with. Which is why
> PGP is so nice.
Well yes sort of, but I can tell you from my own experience PGP is more for
hackers while smime is not. I have convinced 6 of my friends to use
smime, but only one to pgp.
Self signed smime certificates are basically useless, because then you
have to tell the other user either to install a root certificate or to
trust the certificate, in which case smime looses its convenience
(compared to pgp)
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