Re: Setting up a subordinate CA with Verisign as the root CA
From: Keith W. McCammon (km_at_km.com)
Date: 10/17/03
- Next message: CactusMan: "Does "Local Computer security context" mean the local SYSTEM account?"
- Previous message: Dave: "Re: Public Key on Enterprise CA"
- In reply to: Dave: "Setting up a subordinate CA with Verisign as the root CA"
- Next in thread: David Cross [MS]: "Re: Setting up a subordinate CA with Verisign as the root CA"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] [ attachment ]
Date: Fri, 17 Oct 2003 11:05:42 -0400
Doesn't work quite like that. You can't just set up a subordinate CA for a
corporate authority. You need to set up your own root, and then set up a
subordinate for that.
"Dave" <nospam@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:%23E6wSvLlDHA.708@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
> I would like to set up a CA for my Win 2000 domain so that I may issue
> digital certificates to my users for use in encrypting email. Can someone
> point me to someone tell me how I can have Verisign be the root CA while
my
> Windows 2000 CA will be the subordinate CA?
>
>
- Next message: CactusMan: "Does "Local Computer security context" mean the local SYSTEM account?"
- Previous message: Dave: "Re: Public Key on Enterprise CA"
- In reply to: Dave: "Setting up a subordinate CA with Verisign as the root CA"
- Next in thread: David Cross [MS]: "Re: Setting up a subordinate CA with Verisign as the root CA"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] [ attachment ]
Relevant Pages
|