The Let's Encrypt project has announced that it has created the root and intermediate keys and certificates it will use to sign certificates. Let's Encrypt is the no-cost certificate authority announced by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) back in November. In April, the Linux Foundation announced that it would be hosting the project. "The keys and certificates that will underlie Let’s Encrypt have been generated. This was done during a key ceremony at a secure facility today." The intermediate certificates will be cross-signed by IdenTrust so that they will be accepted by browsers before the Let's Encrypt root certificate has been propagated. A bit more news from the blog post: "In the next few weeks, we’ll be saying some more about our plans for going live."
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