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Trust Management for Public Key Infrastructures: Implementing the X.509 Trust Broker

Abstract

A Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) is considered one of the most important techniques used to propagate trust in authentication over the Internet. This technology is based on a trust model defined by the original X.509 (1988) standard and is composed of three entities: the Certification Authority (CA), the certificate holder (or subject) and the Relying Party (RP). The CA plays the role of a trusted third party between the certificate holder and the RP. In many use cases, this trust model has worked successfully. However on the Internet, PKI technology is currently facing many obstacles that slow down its global adoption. In this paper, we argue that most of these obstacles boil down to one problem, which is the trust issue, i.e. how can an RP trust an unknown CA over the Internet? We demonstrate that the original X.509 trust model is not appropriate for the Internet and must be extended to include a new entity, called the Trust Broker, which helps RPs make trust decisions about CAs. We present an approach to assess the quality of a certificate that is related to the quality of the CAโ€™s policy and its commitment to it. The Trust Broker, which is proposed for inclusion in the 2016 edition of X.509, could follow this approach to give RPs trust information about CAs. Finally, we present a prototype Trust Broker that demonstrates how RPs can make informed decisions about certificates in the context of the Web, by using its services

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