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posted by janrinok on Monday February 24 2020, @07:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the honestly,-it's-for-your-own-good... dept.

Apple drops a bomb on long-life HTTPS certificates: Safari to snub new security certs valid for more than 13 months:

Safari will, later this year, no longer accept new HTTPS certificates that expire more than 13 months from their creation date. That means websites using long-life SSL/TLS certs issued after the cut-off point will throw up privacy errors in Apple's browser.

The policy was unveiled by the iGiant at a Certification Authority Browser Forum (CA/Browser) meeting on Wednesday. Specifically, according to those present at the confab, from September 1, any new website cert valid for more than 398 days will not be trusted by the Safari browser and instead rejected. Older certs, issued prior to the deadline, are unaffected by this rule.

By implementing the policy in Safari, Apple will, by extension, enforce it on all iOS and macOS devices. This will put pressure on website admins and developers to make sure their certs meet Apple's requirements – or risk breaking pages on a billion-plus devices and computers.

[...] Shortening the lifespan of certificates does come with some drawbacks. It has been noted that by increasing the frequency of certificate replacements, Apple and others are also making life a little more complicated for site owners and businesses that have to manage the certificates and compliance.

"Companies need to look to automation to assist with certificate deployment, renewal, and lifecycle management to reduce human overhead and the risk of error as the frequency of certificate replacement increase," Callan told us.

We note Let's Encrypt issues free HTTPS certificates that expire after 90 days, and provides tools to automate renewals, so those will be just fine – and they are used all over the web now. El Reg's cert is a year-long affair so we'll be OK.

GitHub.com uses a two-year certificate, which would fall foul of Apple's rules though it was issued before the cut-off deadline. However, it is due to be renewed by June, so there's plenty of opportunity to sort that out. Apple's website has a year-long HTTPS cert that needs renewing in October.

Microsoft is an interesting one: its dot-com's cert is a two-year affair, which expires in October. If Redmond renews it for another two years, it'll trip up over Safari's policy.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by barbara hudson on Monday February 24 2020, @10:34PM (2 children)

    by barbara hudson (6443) <barbara.Jane.hudson@icloud.com> on Monday February 24 2020, @10:34PM (#962048) Journal
    Doesn't matter what their intentions are - they're lying to their users by saying a perfectly valid cert is invalid. Hope a bunch of sites do a class action to sue Apple for slander and defamation. On this topic, fuck Apple. Guess I'll skip the last update.
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 25 2020, @03:24AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 25 2020, @03:24AM (#962185)

    Is it legally actionable? Can it be said that a certificate is a "person" (like a company) and therefore...

    • (Score: 5, Interesting) by barbara hudson on Tuesday February 25 2020, @03:31AM

      by barbara hudson (6443) <barbara.Jane.hudson@icloud.com> on Tuesday February 25 2020, @03:31AM (#962190) Journal
      You're the site operator and Apple is basically saying you're incompetent and your site is insecure. Even though it's fine because the certificate isn't expired. Sounds like defamation and possibly unfair trade practices.
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      SoylentNews is social media. Says so right in the slogan. Soylentnews is people, not tech.