| "Alternatively, if companies cannot handle the rotation, then they likely should re-evaluate if WebPKI is even appropriate for their use-case." I hate hearing this awful take, as if every IT organization has the same neat and tidy systems deployed as they do. Never had to deal with 3rd party SaaS vendors certificate pinning requiring service tickets to change, don't have any hardware devices or appliance based software images each with their own web interface to update certs... Yes companies should have a plan to do their minimum yearly certificate rotates. Yes those companies should have a security plan to rotate affected certificate issues, but in those cases the business users are ok with an outage to remediate a real security issue. But what happened here is that Digicert invalided the entire domain's worth of certs. All those service.companyname.com certs or duplicates under that domain validation were affected in bulk. In some companies there could be thousands of certs under that domain. Digicert screwed up their system implementation and made their customers suffer. "It's really disheartening that publicly trusted CAs just ignore their contractual obligations however they see fit." It's also disheartening to see browsers in the CA consortium ignore the CA resolutions as well. Like how everyone voted for 2 year certs and Apple did their own thing anyways. Any punishment for Apple come? So why pick on the others? |
Those SaaS vendors probably shouldn't be doing cert pinning to begin with. If you don't trust your root store either implement support for CAA or DANE, no need to roll out your own workflow. Those hardware devices should either 1) not use publicly trusted certs, 2) renew their own certs, or 3) have an API to automatically update certs.
The only reason they're still getting away with it is because doing it manually once a year isn't horribly painful. If 90-day validity becomes the industry standard, pain-free certificate renewal turns into a must-have for all new contracts.