Revocation in a sentence as a noun

That, as it turns out, is not the reason for Chrome handling revocation the way it does.

[1] eg: certificate revocation, or even the user removing the root CA from her own key store.

The revocation fee that everyone had to pay after heartbleed could be described as ********.

Deleting your account or the photos themselves is revocation of their usage rights.

This looks like a blanket revocation of anonymizing/VPN services.

Even with revocation checking enabled, no browser that I know of will fail a TLS handshake if the revocation check is blocked.

Checking: "Check for server certificate revocation" does not persist.

I don't think the world has a great answer to the revocation problem when certificates are valid longer and longer periods.

I had hoped that CAs would use the reason code mechanism in CRLs to remove the "administrative" revocations that dominate their CRLs.

I think the revocation misses the point: "if" the NSA has been logging all the traffic from Lavabit for the last 6 months, they can now use the SSL key to decrypt all the data they've stored.

You need to secure a whole range of components at the code level, you need to keep signing keys secure and you need to figure out what your policy is for handling key compromise or revocation.

StartCom is the one provider offering free certificates, which goes a long way to spreading TLS and https more broadly, and the complaint here is that they're daring to charge a fee to maintain their revocation list?

Since key revocation is fundamentally broken it's the difference between having a limited time period where you're exposed and being exposed until the cert actually expires.

How about every distro that wants to allow binary drivers to run builds their own CA infrastructure, verification and qualification team and revocation infrastructure.

The reality is that the Chromium team has apparently thought more carefully about revocation than almost anyone else, came to an important and counterintuitive conclusion about it, and made the design decision that maximized user safety given the constraints.

Revocation definitions

noun

the state of being cancelled or annulled

See also: annulment

noun

the act (by someone having the authority) of annulling something previously done; "the revocation of a law"