Like the TSA at the airport.

Security that we never needed before, but now suddenly we do.

Now we’re dependent on a third party gatekeeper for permission to have a web site.

Free, for now.

It’s a move by the weasels-that-be to turn the Internet into yet another tool for profit and control.

  • Dr_Satan@lemm.eeOP
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    10 months ago

    Yes it’s free today. Maybe not tomorrow. And the fact remains that you need permission from a third party (basically a gov official) to have a website now. Doesn’t that trouble you?

    • KingWizard@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      No, and its clear you don’t understand the fundamentals here and you are throwing around baseless stats.

      It’s not even about the certificate itself but the trust of who generates the cert. Just about anyone can generate a https cert, therefore it will always be free.

      Who’s going to trust a company selling certs for $1000? Now that money is involved, trust is lost and the cert becomes worthless.

      • Dr_Satan@lemm.eeOP
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        10 months ago

        Consider. We’re all using HTTPS and depending on certs.

        Suddenly a wild threat appears.

        For our own safety, from now on, certs will only be issued by those who get special permission from the gov.

        Google will be cooperating in this.

        It’s technically trivial after all, because we’re all already using HTTPS anyway. It’s just a matter of changing the lock on the gate.

        Thank you for your cooperation in these troublesome times.

        (And a year later. We’re installing new security software. We need to charge you $1000/year now. This will have no effect upon our main clients…)

        • KingWizard@kbin.social
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          10 months ago

          Your entire premise requires sustained cooperation of the whole world to collude and agree on something.

        • towerful@programming.dev
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          10 months ago

          Nah, anyone can become a certificate authority.
          The difference is that the current trusted certificate authorities are autonatically trusted by browsers and operating systems.

          But you could run your own CA, issue certs for yourself and your friends, and get them to import your CA public key to their trusted CA store.
          Then it would work just like getting a cert from letsencrypt. The only difference is that letsencrypt is already included the CA store of OSs and browsers, so people dont have to do all the manual stuff

        • udon@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          @KingWizard is right, you don’t understand the fundamentals of this. You’re asking good questions, but people have been asking them decades ago and already found reasonably good answers. HTTPS works okay for what it does. Check out letsencrypt, watch some talks about it. Informing yourself about the matter will get you further than asking more random questions on lemmy.