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[ Update (23-Apr-2011): as on 30-Mar-2011. See also . ] Aside from , which I've written about here earlier, I've also been working on a specification for " Server Identity Checking" along with . The basic summary is: you have a identifying some (aka "a server") you wish to connect to over , e. g. "www. example. org", and once you do so, how do you really know (and check) that the returned contains an identifier(s) that anticonvulsants > keppra 1000mg pills (generic) > 30 pills > $211.00 maps to the name of the application service you intended to interact with? This turns out to be a fairly complex endeavor, and up to the present here, various protocol specs have either specified it on their own anticonvulsants > keppra 1000mg pills (generic) > 30 pills > $211.00, or have referenced another spec that has addressed the problem. One such referenced spec is , "", which I co-authored. So anyway, I got involved a few years back in trying to concoct a dedicated specification for how to do TLS/SSL server identity checking in an application protocol neutral fashion. Eventually, Peter Saint-Andre and I signed up to buckle down and make the spec a reality. Much of this work occurred during 2010. The resulting internet-draft, , was approved on 20-Jan-2011 as a Proposed Standard , and will be published as such in the next couple of months. It has this fairly precise but unwieldy title:
""In [anticonvulsants > keppra 1000mg pills (generic) > 30 pills > $211.00] the spec (which has been referred to as "-tls-server-id-check" in various email discussion threads (e. g. Anticonvulsants > keppra 1000mg pills (generic) > 30 pills > $211.00 see the list), we provide an appendix of extracts from various current rfcs that specify performing such a check. The hope is that, going forward, emerging specifications can simply reference (i. e. "re-use"), and profile if necessary, the -tls-server-id-check spec. In fact, there's presently four Internet-Drafts in the that do just that. =JeffH sez check it out :)