Computers and the internet gave you freedom. Trusted Computing would take your freedom.
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 7th, 2023

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  • but it’s their CA so why would they do that?

    I don’t mean them specifically, but that to me managing access to such a CA cert’s keys is security nightmare, because if I somehow get an infection, and it finds the cert file and the private key, it’ll be much easier for it to make itself more persistent than I want it.

    But if you don’t trust your own CA what’s the point of having a CA?

    That’s the point. I don’t recommend having one. I recommend self signed certs that are

    • limited to a lan (sub)domain or a wildcard of it
    • you verified by the fingerprint (firefox can show this)
    • you only allowed for those of your internal services for the cert was intended

    Or if you don’t want to deal with self signed certs, buy a domain and do lets encrypt with the DNS challenge.
    That’s also more secure, but can be more of a hassle, though I guess it depends on preference.

    But then I would use this latter one too if I had opened any services to the internet, but I didn’t because I don’t need to.