Basic HTML version of Foils prepared May 19 99

Foil 51 VeriSign's Description of Certificate Revocation II

From Remarks on Internet and Java Security Basic Information Track Computational Science Course CPS616 -- Spring Semester 1999. by Geoffrey Fox, Mehmet Sen


When verifying a signature, you can check the relevant CRL to make sure the signer's key has not been revoked if the signed document is important enough to justify the time it takes to perform this check.
Certification Authorities (CAs) maintained CRLs and provide information about revoked keys originally certified by the CA.
  • CRLs only list current keys, since expired keys should not be accepted in any case; when a revoked key is past its original expiration date it is removed from the CRL.
  • Although CRLs are maintained in a distributed manner, there may be central repositories for CRLs, that is, sites on networks containing the latest CRLs from many organizations.
  • An institution like a bank might want an in-house CRL repository to make CRL searches feasible on every transaction.



© Northeast Parallel Architectures Center, Syracuse University, npac@npac.syr.edu

If you have any comments about this server, send e-mail to webmaster@npac.syr.edu.

Page produced by wwwfoil on Wed May 19 1999