[cabfpub] Revisiting CAA

kirk_hall at trendmicro.com kirk_hall at trendmicro.com
Fri May 2 09:08:01 MST 2014


A response to both Ryan and Gerv in this issue -- I'm not saying there have been no mis-issuance of certs -- we have Diginotar, plus some other earlier hacker issues.

I'm trying to find examples where someone said to a CA "Hey, you knowingly issued a cert for my domain (i.e., not a hacking case), and I didn't authorize it."  Even among the biggest fraud targets, like Google, etc.  Has that ever happened?

I don't think CAA will actually be useful in the cases where a CA is conducting vetting as required.  And f a CA isn't conducting vetting as required, the CA probably would not be prevented from issuing a cert because of CAA.  It seems like its biggest effect will to pose a barrier for customers from switching to a new CA (or from buying certs from multiple CAs).

If we can't think of any cases of mistaken intentional issuance by a CA, the case for CAA is pretty weak.

-----Original Message-----
From: Gervase Markham [mailto:gerv at mozilla.org] 
Sent: Friday, May 02, 2014 8:55 AM
To: Kirk Hall (RD-US); Rick Andrews; public at cabforum.org
Subject: Re: [cabfpub] Revisiting CAA

On 02/05/14 16:40, kirk_hall at trendmicro.com wrote:
> Can anyone identify one case -- even one -- of mis-issuance of a 
> certificate by a CA that would have been prevented by CAA?  (I can't 
> think of one.)

It depends how CAs implement CAA. If the CA implements CAA as, among other things, a separate automated sanity check on all certificates, just before they go out the door, using an isolated system - and certs which fail have to be manually approved - then I can see it catching several of the recent misissuances.

If the CA implements CAA as a printed warning on the certificate issuance screen that the operator can choose to deal with or ignore, I imagine it would catch fewer misissuances.

Gerv

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