News

A groundbreaking shift is coming to the world of SSL certificates, and it's set to revolutionize how we secure our online ...
Let's Encrypt, a certificate authority (CA) known for its free TLS/SSL certificates, has begun issuing digital certificates for IP addresses.
Originally launched in 2012 by Mozilla employees J. Alex Halderman and the late Peter Eckersley, the Let's Encrypt project ...
Let's Encrypt will create a certificate authority which is: Free, as in beer, meaning no charge for certificates Automatic, meaning that the installation, configuration and renewal require no ...
One of the largest providers of HTTPS certificates, Let’s Encrypt, saw its root certificate expire this week — meaning you might need to upgrade your devices to prevent them from breaking.
In less than five years, Let's Encrypt has secured almost 200 million websites with free TLS certificates. Written by Steven Vaughan-Nichols, Senior Contributing Editor Feb. 27, 2020 at 12:32 p.m. PT ...
Let's Encrypt has reached a personal milestone in its quest to better secure the Web with one million free TLS certificates now issued to webmasters who wish to better secure their domains. On ...
Let’s Encrypt was forced to revoke more than three million certificates because of a bug in its domain validation and issuance software in March 2020, and in January this year revoked millions ...
Let’s Encrypt has the potential to help a lot of organizations running websites that don’t use SSL/TLS. Digital certificates can be quite expensive: It’s not unusual for a single, average EV ...
Non-profit certificate authority Let's Encrypt, which provides X.509 certificates for TLS encryption at no charge, has announced it will revoke customer certificates today due to a bug in their Boulde ...
Let's Encrypt has announced that from September 1, 2021, its existing root certificate will expire. This will cause significant issues for people using Android version below 7.1.1.
The certificate was issued by Let’s Encrypt, a project that is run by the ISRG (Internet Security Research Group) and is backed by Mozilla, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, ...