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Mention PKI or ‘Client Certificates’ to many people and it may well conjure up images of businesses busily protecting and completing their customers’ online transactions, yet such certificates are to be found throughout our daily lives, in any number of flavors; when we sign into a VPN; use a bank card at an ATM, or a card to gain access to a building; within Oyster public transport smart cards, used in central London.

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SSL/TLS are protocols used for encrypting information between two points. It is usually between server and client, but there are times when server to server and client to client encryption are needed. This article will focus only on the negotiation between server and client.
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SSL is an example of asymmetric encryption , and uses some very cool math tricks to make it easy to use your key pair together for security purposes but practically impossible for anyone else to break your encryption knowing the public key alone.

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The SSL/TLS protocol uses a pair of keys – one private, one public – to authenticate, secure and manage secure connections. These keys are a linked pair of text files and are created together as a pair when you create your Certificate Signing Request (CSR).
SSL works by making one key of the pair (the public key ) known to the outside world, while the other (the private key ) remains a secret only you know.
The private key is used to digitally sign your Certificate Signing Request (CSR), and later to secure and verify connections to your server.
Your private key should be closely guarded, since anyone with access to it can readily break your encryption. (Note again that the private key is just a text file – however, it’s a really important text file and should be protected accordingly.)
If you lose your private key, or believe it was compromised in any way, SSL.com recommends “re-keying” your certificate. To rekey, you’ll create and submit a new CSR, and SSL.com will reissue your certificate using your new key pair. SSL.com offers this as a free service for the lifetime of your certificate – for more information, see this article on how to handle a lost or compromised private key .
The public key, by contrast, is distributed as widely as possible – it’s included as part of your SSL certificate, and works together with your private key to make sure that your data is encrypted, verified and not tampered with during transport.
Anyone with access to your public key can verify that your message is authentic without having to know your secret private key.
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Apple is implementing additional security requirements for all SSL/TLS certificates that impact private SSL/TLS certificates. See Apple's new compliance requirements for Private SSL certificates .
If Apple iOS and macOS trust is required for your private SSL/TLS certificates, you need to make sure your newly issued private TLS/SSL certificates meet the new requirements automatically:
We recommend configuring your private TLS certificate products settings at the account level. This prevents someone in your account from issuing a private SSL certificate not trusted by Apple's iOS 13 and macOS 10.15.
In your CertCentral account, in the sidebar menu, click Settings > Product Settings .
On the Product Settings page, uncheck Configure products by role .
For accounts with multiple divisions, in the For dropdown, select the top-level division.
In the Product column, select Private SSL .
In the Product Settings column, in the Private SSL settings, in the Allowed Validity Periods box, select one or both of these validity periods:
In the Allowed Signature Hashes box, select one or more of these signature hashes:
Repeat these steps for each private SSL certificate product enabled for your account (e.g., Private Multi-Domain SSL).
The next time an account user orders a Private SSL certificate, they will only see the selected validity period options and selected signature hash options on the order form.
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If you just got an issued SSL certificate and are having a hard time finding the corresponding Private key, this article can help you to find that one and only key for your certificate.
Firstly, let’s dive into basics a little. The design of global public key infrastructure, relying on which modern secure
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