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by Jensson
962 days ago
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> which can easily be manipulated to provide a copy of all messages to some convenient third location. Updating others javascript as a proxy isn't "easily". Also if the government goes all this way to tell each internet provider to spy on people, why do you think they couldn't tell certificate authorities to spy on people? It is the same level. I wouldn't be surprised if many CA's in USA already does this. |
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And the way to spy on people via a certificate authority is exactly as described, you get a CA that signs your man-in-the-middle certificate for a website you do not own. Then you MitM that traffic using that certificate, while still getting a green "lock" icon.
With current WebCA certificates, certificate transparency does help a little to detect such MitM certificates, and some CAs have actually been caught red-handed. There are processes to punish or remove such CAs. However, this law would also prevent such actions, thus making it impossible to prevent any future malfeasant CAs.
About an example MitM certificate case and removal, see the DigiNotar case: https://blog.mozilla.org/security/2011/08/29/fraudulent-goog...
For more about how certificate transparency works see http://nil.lcs.mit.edu/6.824/2020/papers/ct-faq.txt