4 Critical Steps in Advance of 47-Day SSL/TLS Certificates
With certificate lifespans set to shrink by 2029, IT teams need to spend the next 100 days planning in order to avoid operational disruptions.
Stay updated on certificate-related infosec topics, including SSL/TLS, PKI, and digital certificate management for robust cyber security.
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Background for this topic.
Digital certificates are electronic documents that verify the ownership of a public cryptographic key by an individual, organization, or device. Issued by trusted Certificate Authorities (CAs) within a Public Key Infrastructure (PKI), certificates enable secure communication by confirming identities and supporting encryption protocols like TLS. They include information such as the subject’s name, public key, issuer, validity period, and digital signature from the CA.
Security concerns with certificates focus on risks like CA compromise or fraudulent issuance, which can allow attackers to impersonate legitimate entities and intercept or alter encrypted traffic. Expired or revoked certificates may cause connection failures or be exploited if clients do not properly validate them. Effective certificate lifecycle management—including timely renewal, revocation checking (via CRLs or OCSP), and monitoring for unauthorized certificates—is essential to maintaining trust and preventing man-in-the-middle attacks or unauthorized access.
With certificate lifespans set to shrink by 2029, IT teams need to spend the next 100 days planning in order to avoid operational disruptions.