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    On 09/20/2012 11:26 AM, From Rob Stradling:
    <blockquote cite="mid:505AD346.1040203@comodo.com" type="cite">
      Or, does the current treatment of expired long-lived certificates
      need to change?
      During a long-lived certificate's lifetime, many browsers will
      notice if it gets revoked. But as soon as that revoked certificate
      expires, those same browsers will presumably start treating that
      certificate no differently than they would treat an expired
      certificate that was never revoked.
    </blockquote>
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    Some browsers will check certificate status nevertheless. But
    certainly certificates that expired shouldn't be relied upon.<br>
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            <td colspan="2">Regards </td>
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            <td>Signer: </td>
            <td>Eddy Nigg, COO/CTO</td>
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            <td> </td>
            <td><a href="http://www.startcom.org">StartCom Ltd.</a></td>
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            <td>XMPP: </td>
            <td><a href="xmpp:startcom@startcom.org">startcom@startcom.org</a></td>
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            <td>Blog: </td>
            <td><a href="http://blog.startcom.org">Join the Revolution!</a></td>
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            <td>Twitter: </td>
            <td><a href="http://twitter.com/eddy_nigg">Follow Me</a></td>
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