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On 01/04/2013 09:40 PM, From Rick Andrews:
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<div class="WordSection1"><span style="font-size: 11pt;
font-family: "Calibri","sans-serif";
color: rgb(31, 73, 125);">I have one concern about the post
process control you’ve put into place. You say that it will
check the basicContraints value against the respective
certificate policy. I’m worried that if that test profile gets
put on the production system again, and certs are issued
against it, your post process control will not alert you,
because the test policy would say “add basicConstrains
cA=true” and that would match the issued certificate.</span></div>
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<br>
Well, clearly CA certificates should be only issued from an off-line
CA root which has nothing lost on any production environment. It's
not clear to me why this has been done in first place (knowing how
CA roots should be treated).<br>
<br>
WebTrust has also a criteria about how development and test data is
treated, I don't know what ETSI says about it. <br>
<br>
Except issuing some test certificate, which however shouldn't
involve any real subscribers, issuing from the CA root end-user
certificates is yet another practice that should be banished by now,
no? Is this what happened here?<br>
<br>
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