A final quick reminder about the below CAcert event which is tomorrow, 
see details below.
Steven Maddox
Lantizia
On 28/01/2020 16:01, Steven Maddox wrote:
 Lo!
 (I've CC'd general@ <mailto:general@lists.staffslug.org.uk> as we've 
 got a fair few people travelling from afar who'd not normally go to 
 regular meetings)
 The CAcert event is in TWO WEEKS!  AAAND that might be a little too 
 much excitement for some top notch nerdy bureaucracy!
 _*Here is what CAcert *is* and *why* you should care...*_
 CAcert is a global non-profit certificate authority that can issue 
 certificates for use with TLS (commonly still known as SSL).  But 
 unlike commercial certificate authorities (like Digicert, Comodo, 
 IdenTrust, GoDaddy) they're completely free!
 CAcert /*predates*/ Let's Encrypt (abbreviated "LE", who also do free 
 certificates) and has 5 key advantages...
   * Certificates can be issued for 2 years rather than only 3 months
     with automation scripts
   * E-mails, code and other things can be signed rather than just websites
   * Certificates can be issued in your name or your organisations
     rather than just in the name of your domain
   * Isn't reliant upon cross-signing with another profit making CA
     (e.g. IdenTrust cross-signs LE)
   * Supports wildcards so you can cover many subdomains!
 Since your identity needs proving before they can be issued... CAcert 
 users physically meet one another to verify we're who we say we are.  
 The more you've been "assured" by someone, the more points you get 
 until you've got enough to generate free certificates and also assure 
 other people... effectively it's "crowd sourced" trust.
 After the presentation is over (presented by Alex Roberton, who 
 presented a UK CAcert event in 2012) there'll be time to "assure" 
 people and get "assured".
 We've got all the forms here... so bring government-issued ID that has 
 your photo on it, *as many as possible* (e.g. UK passport and UK 
 drivers license).  Failing that, bring anything that confirms your ID 
 (in an official way) especially something like your birth certificate, 
 plus any documentation for marriage or "change of name" too if it 
 applies.  If you're unsure there is a page on it here... 
 
http://wiki.cacert.org/AcceptableDocuments/UnitedKingdom
 CAcert has fell on some hard times lately and I'm hoping to help bring 
 this excellent project some new blood.  Work continues in being 
 accepted by the "CA/Browser Forum" so their root certificates can get 
 widely distributed.
 "SSL certificates" are a RIGHT RACKET for the price you pay and it's 
 shocking the small number of commercial players involved! LE helps 
 somewhat but as it's aims are different, it can only go so far.  Not 
 far enough if we actually want to combat phishing involving misspelt 
 domains (especially when people get a false sense of security seeing a 
 padlock!  some re-education needed there, not helped by the browsers!).
 It's advisable to make yourself a free CAcert account before coming 
 along.  It's also helpful to know how to install their root 
 certificate and generate your own client certificate.
 If you want to assure people, you'll also need to pass a "challenge" 
 online.  If you get stuck on this, just come to the presentation first 
 and then try to take this after while you're here (we've got plenty of 
 PC's).  If you've already generated a client certificate, just 
 remember you'll need to have access to it (or create another) when you 
 get here!
 I've detailed any steps you might want to follow before the 
 presentation (from making an account, to taking the "challenge") in 
 the below blog post...
 
https://staffslug.org.uk/workshop-on-11-02-2020-introduction-to-cacert/
 Hope to see you all there :)
 -- 
 Steven Maddox
 Lantizia