Jisc’s Certificate Service is due for re-procurement in 2021 and as part of this process we want to get your views.
We are inviting those who use the service to take part in a workshop on Tuesday 24th September at Jisc’s offices in London. During the day we will be asking for your feedback on the existing service and provide you with the opportunity to discuss any additional functionality that would enhance the service.
The workshop will start at 10:30 and finish at 15:00 – lunch will be provided.
The use of underscore characters in dnsNames is not allowed in Internet standards but has historically been treated as a gray area when used in the SAN field of TLS/SSL certificates. Most CAs are disallowing this issuance following discussion in the CA/Browser Forum.
We have previously issued browser-trusted TLS/SSL certificates that include dnsNames with underscore characters in the SAN fields.
WE ENCOURAGE CUSTOMERS TO VALIDATE DOMAINS IN ADVANCE TO AVOID POSSIBLE LENGTHY DELAYS IN PROCESSING CERTIFICATE REQUESTS
Q1) What is the change?
From 1 August, new industry regulation states that Certificate Authorities (CAs) must no longer rely on checking a public WHOIS record to validate domain ownership. Instead, customers requesting a certificate must demonstrate a ‘positive interaction’ to show they have control over/ownership of the domain to be used in a certificate.
Change to Certificate Service – from 1st March 2018
Q1) What is the change in the maximum duration of certificates?
A) The maximum duration will be limited to 2 years, currently this is 3 years.
Q2) What certificates are affected?
A) Only medium assurance Organisation Validated (OV) certificates. High assurance Extended Validation (EV) and Wildcard certificates are already limited to 2 years.
Q3) Who is driving this change?
We're pleased to announce that from today the service can provide end user certificates, which are used for digitally signing and encrypting emails. These are called S/MIME (Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) certificates.
S/MIME are installed on email clients which then enable the end user to send digitally signed emails, giving recipients assurances that the email originated from the sender's account. By signing emails, recipients can also have confidence that the contents of the email has been been altered in transit.
The change to the number of credits required for certificates with 5 or more domains takes effect from 5 September 2017. The cost of Mixed certificate credit bundles will remain unchanged.
The only changes are as follows:
The change to the number of credits required for certificates with 5 or more domains take effect from 5 September 2017. The cost of Mixed certificate credit bundles will remain unchanged.
The only changes are as follows:
The service changed certificate provider to QuoVadis in 2015, and as part of that transition Jisc is obliged to ensure all organisations that use the Certificate Service comply with and agree to a QuoVadis ‘Sub-LRA Agreement’. We have therefore updated the Certificate Service Terms & Conditions to reflect this.
The following certificates can be obtained through the Jisc Certificate Service's web app, found in the App Centre here:
The service provides Extended Validation (EV) server certificates S/MIME end user for digitally signing emails for high, both of which offer users the highest possible assurance. Business/Organisation Validated (OV) and Wildcard (of OV type) certificates are also available.
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All certificates issued are SHA-256.
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For all FAQs please click on the header link 'Charging FAQs'
Jisc Certificate Service – charging update 24.04.2013 - 10 new points:
1. Why is the date for charging being moved?
