On Sun, 5 Jun 2005, bruce wrote:
ssl certs don't allow you, the user to know if you're at the right site!! unless it's not possible to fake the information returned by the server to the client. i suspect that the information stream is easily faked...
ssl cert's are an assertion that the ca (cetrifcate authority) is asserting that the site you connecting to is who they say they are. if you trust the ca (who's public key is in your keyring) then you trust the sites that they vouch for. forging the ca's signature is infeasable. subverting the ca's procedures for signing a cert are in some cases not.
my question.. how do you know that paypal.com.. ia actually paypal.com (paypal), and not a carefuly crafted fake!
because you trust verisign. (maybe you trust them)
-bruce
-----Original Message----- From: fedora-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:fedora-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Matthew Miller Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 3:15 PM To: For users of Fedora Core releases Subject: Re: how can you verify that the site you get is not a fake?
On Sun, Jun 05, 2005 at 01:37:19PM -0700, bruce wrote:if i go to a site, how can i verify that the site that's displayed isreallythe 'correct' site. is there a way to actually 'get' the ip address, and then to determine if that ip address actually matches up to the 'owner' of the site i'm looking at.... any thoughts/ideas/etc...
There's really not an absolutely good way to do this. The best we've got is SSL server certificates.
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