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Re: Online Certificate Revocation Protocol
Oops. Correction below.
At 04:47 PM 6/8/01 -0400, Housley, Russ wrote:
Peter:
You make an interesting point. I figure that a message signed with the
private key that is claiming to be compromised is a good thing to pay
attention to.
If the message is from the subscriber, then that subscriber probably knows
that some bad thing just happened and the subscriber is trying to let
everyone know. He does not want any one to rely on the key any more.
If the message is not from the subscriber, then the key has absolutely
been compromised. What a nice attacker to tell everyone.
Russ
Indeed. I have often considered that a revocation request signed with the
corresponding private key is one of the few things in this world one can
act upon reliably. If we could build whole systems on such principles,
we'd be home free.
A question: If one discovers that they have accidently destroyed their
private key (and there is no evidence of compromise), are they under any
particular obligation to request revocation? Is there any liability, or
other real "downside" to simply getting a new key and keeping mum about the
fate of the former key?
(I ask, because this seems the only [USER GENERATED] case where revocation
request could NOT be signed by the key in question.)
___tony___
At 04:34 AM 6/9/2001 +0000, Peter Gutmann wrote:
Nada Kapidzic Cicovic <nada@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>This is exactly what CMP specifies. Many vendors already have support
for CMP
>EE initiated certificate revocation. The interoperability of different
>implementations of CMP certificate revocation (among other things) has been
>conducted during PKI Forum and ICSA CMP interop testing quite successfully.
However there are two ways to look at revocation, the DOS model and the scram
switch model. The DOS model says that anyone who can revoke your cert can
cause a DOS, so it should be made as difficult as humanly possible to
revoke a
cert. The scram switch model says that when your private key is compromised
you want the cert revoked right now with no excuses, so it should be made as
easy as possible to revoke a cert. CMP follows the DOS model and makes
it very
difficult (in some cases impossible) to revoke your cert. Programs like PGP
follow the scram switch model (via suicide-note revocations) and make it very
easy to revoke your cert. Depending on your point of view, CMP may not
be the
right thing for handling revocations.
Peter.
Tony Bartoletti 925-422-3881 <azb@xxxxxxxx>
Information Operations, Warfare and Assurance Center
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Livermore, CA 94551-9900