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Certification Practice Statement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Certification Practice Statement (CPS) is a document from a certificate authority or a member of a web of trust which describes their practice for issuing and managing public key certificates.[1]

Some elements of a CPS include documenting practices of:

  • issuance
  • publication
  • archiving
  • revocation
  • renewal

By detailing the practice of issuance, revocation and renewal, a CPS aids entities in judging the relative reliability of a given certificate authority.[2]

Certificate authorities

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In a certificate authority, the CPS should derive from the organization's certificate policy and may be referenced in issued certificates.[3]

Web of trust

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Because individuals act as certifiers in a web of trust, individual CPS documents are sometimes used. For example, in a PGP WoT, the CPS might state that the certifying entity checked two forms of legal government ID before signing the person's public key.

Digital signatures

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When verifying digital signatures, it's necessary to review the CPS so as to determine the meaning of the issuance of the certificate by the certifying entity.[4]

References

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  1. ^ S. Chokhani; W. Ford; R. Sabett; C. Merrill; S. Wu (November 2003). Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate Policy and Certification Practices Framework. Network Working Group. doi:10.17487/RFC3647. RFC 3647. Informational. p. 15. Obsoletes RFC 2527.
  2. ^ American Bar Association Digital Signature Guidelines 1996, ISBN 1-57073-250-7 (section 1.8.1)
  3. ^ "Creating Certificate Policies and Certificate Practice Statements".
  4. ^ American Bar Association Digital Signature Guidelines 1996, ISBN 1-57073-250-7
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