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<title>Shorewall Certificate Authority</title>
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<meta name="author" content="Tom Eastep">
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<h1 style="text-align: left;">Shorewall Certificate Authority
(CA) Certificate</h1>
<span style="font-weight: bold;">Tom Eastep<br>
<br>
</span>Copyright © 2001-2003 Thomas M. Eastep<br>
<br>
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software
Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover,
and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included
in the section entitled “<a href=
"http://shorewall.net/GnuCopyright.htm">GNU Free Documentation
License</a>”.<br>
<br>
2003-12-31<br>
<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
Given that I develop and support Shorewall without asking for
any renumeration, I can hardly justify paying $200US+ a year to
a Certificate Authority such as Thawte (A Division of VeriSign)
for an X.509 certificate to prove that I am who I am. I have
therefore established my own Certificate Authority (CA) and
sign my own X.509 certificates. I use these certificates on my
list server (<a href=
"https://lists.shorewall.net">https://lists.shorewall.net</a>)
which hosts parts of this web site.<br>
<br>
X.509 certificates are the basis for the Secure Socket Layer
(SSL). As part of establishing an SSL session (URL
https://...), your browser verifies the X.509 certificate
supplied by the HTTPS server against the set of Certificate
Authority Certificates that were shipped with your browser. It
is expected that the server's certificate was issued by one of
the authorities whose identities are known to your browser.
<br>
<br>
This mechanism, while supposedly guaranteeing that when you
connect to https://www.foo.bar you are REALLY connecting to
www.foo.bar, means that the CAs literally have a license to
print money -- they are selling a string of bits (an X.509
certificate) for $200US+ per year!!!I <br>
<br>
I wish that I had decided to become a CA rather that designing
and writing Shorewall.<br>
<br>
What does this mean to you? It means that the X.509 certificate
that my server will present to your browser will not have been
signed by one of the authorities known to your browser. If you
try to connect to my server using SSL, your browser will frown
and give you a dialog box asking if you want to accept the
sleezy X.509 certificate being presented by my server. <br>
<br>
There are two things that you can do:<br>
<ol>
<li>You can accept the mail.shorewall.net certificate when
your browser asks -- your acceptence of the certificate can
be temporary (for that access only) or perminent.</li>
<li>You can download and install <a href="ca.crt">my
(self-signed) CA certificate.</a> This will make my
Certificate Authority known to your browser so that it will
accept any certificate signed by me.<br>
</li>
</ol>
What are the risks?<br>
<ol>
<li>If you install my CA certificate then you assume that I
am trustworthy and that Shorewall running on your firewall
won't redirect HTTPS requests intented to go to your bank's
server to one of my systems that will present your browser
with a bogus certificate claiming that my server is that of
your bank.</li>
<li>If you only accept my server's certificate when prompted
then the most that you have to loose is that when you connect
to https://mail.shorewall.net, the server you are connecting
to might not be mine.</li>
</ol>
I have my CA certificate loaded into all of my browsers but I
certainly won't be offended if you decline to load it into
yours... :-)<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
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