"No man is an island," John Donne reminds us. We do not practice cryptography on our own: there would be little point. Even in the simple situation of the spy and his spymaster, it is important to be sure you are actually talking to the correct person. Many counter-intelligence operations depend on capturing the spy and replacing him at the encrypting station with one of their own people to feed the enemy with twaddle. This can be annoying and dangerous for the spymaster, so he often teaches his spies little tricks that he hopes the captors will overlook and so betray themselves.[39]
[39]Leo Marks, Between Silk and Cyanide, Free Press, 1999.
In the larger cryptographic world of the Web, the problem is as acute. When we order a pack of cards from www.butterthlies.com, we want to be sure the company accepting our money really is that celebrated card publisher and not some interloper; similarly, Butterthlies, Inc., wants to be sure that we are who we say we are and that we have some sort of credit account that will pay for their splendid offerings. The problems are solved to some extent by the idea of a certificate. A certificate is an electronic document signed (i.e., having a secure hash of it encrypted using a private key, which can therefore be checked with the public key) by some respectable person or company called a certification authority (CA). It contains the holder's public key plus information about her: name, email address, company, and so on (see Chapter 11, later in this chapter). You get this document by filling in a certificate request form issued by some CA; after you have crossed their palm with silver and they have applied whatever level of verification they deem appropriate — which may be no more than telephoning the number you have given them to see if "you" answer the phone — they send you back the data file.
In the future, the certification authority itself may hold a certificate from some higher-up CA, and so on, back to a CA that is so august and immensely respectable that it can sign its own certificate. (In the absence of a corporeal deity, some human has to do this.) This certificate is known as a root certificate, and a good root certificate is one for which the public key is widely and reliably available.
Currently, pretty much every CA uses a self-signed certificate, and certainly all the public ones do. Until some fairly fundamental work has been done to deal with how and when to trust second-level certificates, there isn't really any alternative. After all, just because you trust Fred to sign a certificate for Bill, does this mean you should trust Bill to sign certificates? Not in our opinion.
A different approach is to build up a network of verified certificates — a Web of Trust (WOT) — from the bottom up, starting with people known to the originators, who then vouch for a wider circle and so on. The original scheme was proposed as part of PGP. An explanatory article is at http://www.byte.com/art/9502/sec13/art4.htm. The database of PGP trusties is spread through the Web and therefore presents problems of verification. Thawte has a different version, in which the database is managed by the company — see http://www.thawte.com/html/SUPPORT/wot/. These proposals are interesting, but raise almost as many questions as they solve about the nature of trust and the ability of other people to make decisions about trustworthiness. As far as we are aware, WOTs do not yet play any significant part in web commerce, though they are widely used in email security.[40]
[40]Though one of us (BL) has recently done some work in this area: see http://keyman.aldigital.co.uk/.
When you do business with someone else on the Web, you exchange certificates (or at least, check the server's certificate), which you get from a CA (some are listed later). Secure transactions, therefore, require the parties be able to verify the certificates of each other. To verify a certificate, you need to have the public key of the authority that issued it. If you are presented with a certificate from an unknown authority, then your browser will issue ominous warnings — however, the main browsers are aware of the main CAs, so this is a rare situation in practice.
When the whole certificate structure is in place, there will be a chain of certificates leading back through bigger organizations to a few root certificate authorities, who are likely to be so big and impressive, like the telephone companies or the banks, that no one doubts their provenance.
The question of chains of certificates is the first stage in the formalization of our ideas of business and personal financial trust. Since the establishment of banks in the 1300s, we have gotten used to the idea that if we walk into a bank, it is safe to give our hard-earned money to the complete stranger sitting behind the till. However, on the Internet, the reassurance of the expensive building and its impressive staff will be missing. It will be replaced in part by certificate chains. But just because a person has a certificate does not mean you should trust him unreservedly. LocalBank may well have a certificate from MegaBank, and MegaBank from the Fed, and the Fed from whichever deity is in the CA business. LocalBank may have given their janitor a certificate, but all this means is that he probably is the janitor he says he is. You would not want to give him automatic authority to debit your account with cleaning charges.
You certainly would not trust someone who had no certificate, but what you would trust them to do would depend on policy statements issued by her employers and fiduciary superiors, modified by your own policies, which most people have not had to think very much about. The whole subject is extremely extensive and will probably bore us to distraction before it all settles down.
A good overview of the whole subject is to be found at http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/ssl/ssl_intro.html, and some more cynical rantings of one of the authors here: http://www.apache-ssl.org/7.5things.txt. See also Security Engineering by Ross Anderson (Wiley, 2001).
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