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Digital Certificates
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ALSO CALLED: Public Key Certificates, Digi Cert, Digicert, Certificates, and Digital IDs
DEFINITION: A digital certificate is an electronic "credit card" that establishes your credentials when doing business or other transactions on the Web. It is issued by a certification authority (CA). It contains your name, a serial number, expiration dates, a copy of the certificate holder's public
Definition continues below.
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Enterprise SSL
| sponsored by GeoTrust, Inc.
DATA SHEET:Enterprise SSL from GeoTrust is a fully-managed service designed to address
the diverse and immediate security needs of todays global e-business
environments. Posted: 27 Jul 2004 | Published: 01 Jul 2004
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True BusinessID [formerly eBusinessID]
| sponsored by GeoTrust, Inc.
DATA SHEET:True BusinessID is the first 2nd generation web trust solution that combines state-of-the-art 128-bit SSL encryption and identity verification in a single easy-to-use package. Posted: 27 Jul 2004 | Published: 26 Jul 2004
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Power Server ID: Powerful SSL Certificates for Todays Global e-Business
| sponsored by GeoTrust, Inc.
DATA SHEET:The Power Server ID digital certificate is issued under the most widely embedded GeoTrust root - the Equifax Secure CA root. Posted: 27 Jul 2004 | Published: 01 Jul 2004
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QuickSSL® Premium: Web Server Certificates
| sponsored by GeoTrust, Inc.
DATA SHEET:With QuickSSL Premium web server certificates, you and your customers can conduct secure Internet transactions with the same level of trust and confidence you expect in the offline world. Posted: 27 Jul 2004 | Published: 26 Jul 2004
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DIGITAL CERTIFICATES DEFINITION (continued):
A digital certificate is an electronic "credit card" that establishes your credentials when doing business or other transactions on the Web. It is issued by a certification authority ( CA). It contains your name, a serial number, expiration dates, a copy of the certificate holder's public key (used for encrypting messages and digital signatures), and the digital signature of the certificate-issuing authority so that a recipient can verify that the certificate is real. Some digital certificates conform to a standard, X.509. Digital certificates can be kept in registries so that authenticating users can look up other users' public keys. Digital Certificates definition sponsored by SearchSecurity.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
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