Comment by ocdtrekkie
2 days ago
I was drastically oversimplifying by calling certificates a password. But the point actually does definitely stand: In the long-lived certificate days, you'd keep your CAs and such offline, and generally speaking, highly secured. Now you have to give your automations everywhere everything they need to constantly generate keys that claim to be your site. People are pushed to make drastically less secure choices about how they generate certificates because it needs to happen so often. A lot like adding a 1 on your last password. ;)
Also, short lifetime certificates help deprogram concern about certificate warnings (most nontechnical users know to ignore them, as a network admin, I've never seen a certificate warning that was actually due to a compromise... so I also ignore them all), which leads to hypothetically much less safe behavior than if certificate warnings only happened when rational.
Which is to say, if you believe a certificate that expired yesterday should result in a scare screen to users or worse with HSTS, interfering with the ability to access it all, you failed security 101.
No comments yet
Contribute on Hacker News ↗