msgid "A trusted 3rd party is simply someone in your country that is responsible for witnessing signatures and ID documents. This role is covered by many different titles such as public notary, justice of the peace and so on. Other people are allowed to be authoritative in this area as well, such as bank managers, accountants and lawyers."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/38.php:21 www/index/13.php:21
msgid "ANY amount will be appreciated - the more funding CAcert receives, the sooner it can achieve the goals of the community."
msgid "Alternatively as things progress we can add more layers of security with say 4 webservers talking to 2 intermediate servers, talking to the root store, and acting in a token ring fashion, anything happening out of sequence, and the server directly upstream shuts itself down, which if that were in place and there were multiple paths, any down time in this fashion would fall over to the servers not compromised, anyways just some food for thought."
msgid "Apart from the boot stuff, all data resides on an encrypted partition on the root store server and only manual intervention in the boot up process by entering the password will start it again."
msgid "As anyone who has received an email containing a virus from a strange address knows, emails can be easily spoofed. The identity of the sender is very easy to forge via email. Thus a great advantage is that digital signing provides a means of ensuring that an email is really from the person you think it is. If everyone digitally signed their emails, it would be much easier to know whether an email is legitimate and unchanged and to the great relief of many, spamming would be much easier to control, and viruses that forge the sender's address would be obvious and therefore easier to control."
msgid "Before you can start issuing certificates for your website, irc server, smtp server, pop3, imap etc you will need to add domains to your account under the domain menu. You can also remove domains from here as well. Once you've added a domain you are free then to go into the Server Certificate section and start pasting CSR into the website and have the website return you a valid certificate for up to 2 years if you have 50 trust points, or 6 months for no trust points."
msgid "Below is the link you need to open to verify your email address. Once your address is verified you will be able to start issuing certificates till your hearts' content!"
msgid "Browse to the location you saved the .cer file to in step 1"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:25
msgid "But perhaps, fundamentally, the most important reason for digital signing is awareness and privacy. It creates awareness of the (lack of) security of the Internet, and the tools that we can arm ourselves with to ensure our personal security. And in sensitising people to digital signatures, we become aware of the possibility of privacy and encryption."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:7 www/help/2.php:35
msgid "But, er, is this really proof of your email identity?"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:48
msgid "But, with all this money, and all this responsibility, they must be taking a lot of care to ensure the Certificate Authorities do their jobs well, and keep doing their jobs well, right? Well right?!"
msgid "CAcert Inc. is a non-profit association which is legally able to accept donations. CAcert adheres to strict guidelines about how this money can to be used. If you'd like to make a donation, you can do so via "
msgid "CAcert Inc.'s public certification services are governed by a CPS as amended from time to time which is incorporated into this Agreement by reference. The Subscriber will use the SSL Server Certificate in accordance with CAcert Inc.'s CPS and supporting documentation published at"
msgid "CAcert may, from time to time, alter the amount of Assurance Points that a class of assurer may assign as is necessary to effect a policy or rule change. We may also alter the amount of Assurance Points available to an individual, or new class of assurer, should another policy of CAcert require this."
msgid "CAcert.org is a community driven, Certificate Authority that issues certificates to the public at large for free."
msgstr ""
#: www/wot/0.php:17
msgid "CAcert.org was designed to be by the community for the community, and instead of placing all the labour on a central authority and in turn increasing the cost of certificates, the idea was to get community in conjunction with this website to have trust maintained in a dispersed and automated manner!"
msgid "Certificates expires in 12 months; certificates <u>must</u> include your full name."
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:55
msgid "Certificates expires in 12 months; only the email address itself can be entered into the certificate (not your full name)"
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:85
msgid "Certificates expires in 6 months; only the domain name itself can be entered into the certificates (not your full name, company name, location, etc.)."
msgid "Currently there is 2 main servers, one for webserver, one for root store, with the root store only connected to the webserver via serial cable, with a daemon running as non-root processes on each end of the serial listening/sending requests/info."
msgid "Disclaimer : These are the author's opinions, but they should not be considered 'truth' without personal verification. The author may have made mistakes and any mistakes will be willingly rectified by contacting the administrator of elucido.net, contact details available from the normal domain registration information services (e.g. whois.net). No recommendation to install a Certificate Authority's root certificate is either intended nor implied."
msgid "Easy. Ish. Go to CAcert.org, install their root certificate and then follow their joining instructions. Once you have joined, request a certificate from the menu. You will receive an email with a link to the certificate. Click on the link from your email software, and hopefully it will be seamlessly installed. Next find the security section of the settings in your email software and configure digital signatures using the certificate you just downloaded. Hmm. Call me if you want, I'll guide you through it."
msgid "Enable encrypted data transfer for users accessing your web, email, or other SSL enabled service on your server; wildcard certificates are allowed."
msgid "Firstly you need to join CAcert to do that go:"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/4.php:1
msgid "Firstly you will need to run the following command, preferably in secured directory no one else can access, however protecting your private keys is beyond the scope of this document."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/0.php:2
msgid "Following are several tips you may find useful."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:71
msgid "For more information, refer to your server documentation or visit"
msgid "General questions about CAcert should be sent to the general support list, this list has many more volunteers then those directly involved with the running of the website. While it's best if you sign up to the mailing list to get replied to, you don't have to, but please make sure you note this in your email, otherwise it might seem like you didn't get a reply to your question."
msgid "I believe that the assertion of identity I am making is correct, complete and verifiable. I have seen original documentation attesting to this identity. I accept that CAcert may challenge this assurance and call upon me to prove the basis for it, and that I may be held responsible if I cannot provide such proof."
msgid "I hereby represent that I am fully authorized by the owner of the information contained in the CSR sent to CAcert Inc. to apply for an Digital Certificate for secure and authenticated electronic transactions. I understand that a digital certificate serves to identify the Subscriber for the purposes of electronic communication and that the management of the private keys associated with such certificates is the responsibility of the subscriber's technical staff and/or contractors."
msgid "I'll anwser the why part first, as that's reasonably easy. The short answer is it takes most of the key handling responsibilty away from you and/or your group. If you need to revoke your key for any reason (such as a developer leaving the project) it won't effect your ability to revoke the existing key or keys, and issue new ones."
msgid "If the Subscriber's name and/or domain name registration change the subscriber will immediately inform CAcert Inc. who shall revoke the digital certificate. When the Digital Certificate expires or is revoked the company will permanently remove the certificate from the server on which it is installed and will not use it for any purpose thereafter. The person responsible for key management and security is fully authorized to install and utilize the certificate to represent this organization's electronic presence."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/3.php:22
msgid "If the Subscriber's name and/or domain name registration change the subscriber will immediately inform CAcert Inc. who shall revoke the digital certificate. When the Digital Certificate expires or is revoked the company will permanently remove the certificate from the server on which it is installed andwill not use it for any purpose thereafter. The person responsible for key management and security is fully authorized to install and utilize the certificate to represent this organization's electronic presence."
msgid "If the root store detects a bad request it assumes the webserver is compromised and shuts itself down."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/7.php:4
msgid "If the root store doesn't receive a 'ping' reply over the serial link within a determined amount of time it assumes the webserver is compromised or the root store itself has been stolen and shuts itself down."
msgid "If we change our Privacy Policy, we will post those changes on www.CAcert.org. If we decide to use personally identifiable information in a manner different from that stated at the time it was collected, we will notify users via email. Users will be able to opt out of any new use of their personal information."
msgstr ""
#: www/wot/7.php:140
msgid "If you are happy with this location, click 'Make my location here' to update your location details."
msgid "If you have questions, comments or otherwise and information you're sending to us contains sensitive details, you should use the contact form below. Due to the large amounts of support emails we receive, sending general questions via this contact form will generally take longer then using the support mailing list. Also sending queries in anything but english could cause delays in supporting you as we'd need to find a translator to help."
msgid "If you need to contact us in writing, address your mail to:"
msgstr ""
#: www/account/0.php:18
msgid "If you would like to view news items or change languages you can click the logout or go home links. Go home doesn't log you out of the system, just returns you to the front of the website. Logout logs you out of the system."
msgstr ""
#: www/wot/3.php:32
msgid "If, and only if, the two match completely - you may award trust points up to the maximum points you are able to allocate;"
msgid "In light of a request on the bugzilla list for more information about how our root certificate is protected I've decided to do a write up here and see if there is anything more people suggest could be done, or a better way of handling things altogether."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:9
msgid "In the 'Directory Security' folder click on the 'Server Certificate' button in the 'Secure communications' section. If you have not used this option before the 'Edit' button will not be active."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:57
msgid "In the 'IIS Certificate Wizard' you should find a 'Pending Certificate Request'."
msgid "In this section you will be able to edit your personal information (if you haven't been assured), update your pass phrase, and lost pass phrase questions. You will also be able to set your location for the Web of Trust, it also effects the email announcement settings which among other things can be set to notify you if you're within 200km of a planned assurance event. You'll also be able to set additional contact information when you become fully trusted, so others can contact you to meet up outside official events."
msgid "It is essential that CAcert Assurers understand and follow the rules below to ensure that applicants for assurance are suitably identified, which, in turn, maintains trust in the system."
msgid "It is imperative that you maintain the confidentiality and privacy of the applicant, and never disclose the information obtained without the applicant's consent."
msgid "Most people would object if they found that all their postal letters are being opened, read and possibly recorded by the Government before being passed on to the intended recipient, resealed as if nothing had happened. And yet this is what happens every day with your emails (in the UK). There are some who have objected to this intrusion of privacy, but their voices are small and fall on deaf ears. However the most effective way to combat this intrusion is to seal the envelope shut in a miniature bank vault, i.e. encrypt your email. If all emails were encrypted, it would be very hard for Government, or other organisations/individual crackers, to monitor the general public. They would only realistically have enough resources to monitor those they had reason to suspect. Why? Because encryption can be broken, but it takes a lot of computing power and there wouldn't be enough to monitor the whole population of any given country."
msgid "Next step is that you submit the contents of server.csr to the CAcert website, it should look *EXACTLY* like the following example otherwise the server may reject your request because it appears to be invalid."
msgid "Of the biggest reasons why most people haven't started doing this, apart from being slightly technical, the reason is financial. You need your own certificate to digitally sign your emails. And the Certificate Authorities charge money to provide you with your own certificate. Need I say more. Dosh = no thanks I'd rather walk home. But organisations are emerging to provide the common fool in the street with a free alternative. However, given the obvious lack of funding and the emphasis on money to get enrolled, these organisations do not yet have the money to get themselves established as trusted Certificate Authorities. Thus it is currently down to trust. The decision of the individual to trust an unknown Certificate Authority. However once you have put your trust in a Certificate Authority you can implicitly trust the digital signatures generated using their certificates. In other words, if you trust (and accept the certificate of) the Certificate Authority that I use, you can automatically trust my digital signature. Trust me!"
msgid "Once you decide to subscribe for an SSL Server Certificate you will need to complete this agreement. Please read it carefully. Your Certificate Request can only be processed with your acceptance and understanding of this agreement."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/0.php:26
msgid "Once you have verified your company you will see these menu options. They allow you to issue as many certificates as you like without proving individual email accounts as you like, further more you are able to get your company details on the certificate."
msgid "Once you've submitted it the system will process your request and send an email back to you containing your server certificate."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:45
msgid "One assumes that if a site has an SSL certificate (that's what enables secure communication, for exchanging personal details, credit card numbers, etc. and gives the 'lock' icon in the browser) that they have obtained that certificate from a reliable source (a Certificate Authority), which has the appropriate stringent credentials for issuing something so vital to the security of the Internet, and the security of your communications. You have probably never even asked yourself the question of who decided to trust these Certificate Authorities, because your browser comes with their (root) certificates pre-installed, so any web site that you come across that has an SSL certificate signed by one of them, is automatically accepted (by your browser) as trustworthy."
msgid "PLEASE NOTE: Due to the large amounts of support questions, incorrectly directed emails may be ignored, this is a volunteer effort and directing general questions to the right place will help everyone, including yourself as you will get a speedier reply."
msgstr ""
#: www/wot/6.php:28
msgid "PLEASE NOTE: You have already assured this person before! If this is unintentional please DO NOT CONTINUE with this assurance."
msgid "Please Note. All information on your certificate will be removed except the CommonName field, this is because it's an automated service and cannot automatically verify other details on your certificates are valid or not. If you are a valid organisation and would like more details to appear on certificates, you will need to have at least 50 assurance points and you need to send us a copy of your document of incorporation. Then we can add those details to your certificates. Contact us for more information on our organisational services."
msgid "Please Note: You can not set an unverified account as a default account, and you can not remove a default account. To remove the default account you must set another verified account as the default."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/8.php:19
msgid "Please choose an authority email address"
msgstr ""
#: www/account/11.php:16 www/account/21.php:19
msgid "Please make sure the following details are correct before proceeding any further."
msgid "Please note a general limitation is that, unlike long-time players like Verisign, CAcert's root certificate is not included by default in mainstream browsers, email clients, etc. This means people to whom you send encrypted email, or users who visit your SSL-enabled web server, will first have to import CAcert's root certificate, or they will have to agree to pop-up security warnings (which may look a little scary to non-techy users)."
msgid "Please note, in the interests of good security, the pass phrase must be made up of an upper case letter, lower case letter, number and symbol."
msgstr ""
#: www/wot/8.php:40
msgid "Please note: All html will be stripped from the contact information box, a link to an email form will automatically be inserted to ensure your privacy."
msgid "Question: I'm a software developer for linux and I want to use CAcert/openssl to distribute my packages with detached signatures, is this possible and why would I do this over PGP/GPG detached signatures?"
msgid "Return to the 'Internet Information Services' screen in 'Administrative Tools' under 'Control Panel'. Right click on 'Default Web Site' and select 'Properties'."
msgid "Same as above plus get 100 assurance points by meeting with mulitple assurers from the CAcert Web of Trust, who verify your identity using your government issued photo identity documents."
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:64
msgid "Same as above plus you can include your full name in the certificates."
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:95
msgid "Same as above, except certificates expire in 24 months."
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:96
msgid "Same as above, plus get 50 assurance points by meeting with assurer(s) from the CAcert Web of Trust, who verify your identity using your government issued photo identity documents."
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:66
msgid "Same as above, plus you must get a minimum of 50 assurance points by meeting with one or more assurers from the CAcert Web of Trust, who verify your identity using your government issued photo identity documents."
msgid "Security is a serious matter. For a digital certificate with full rights to be issued to an individual by a Certificate Authority, stringent tests must be conducted, including meeting the physical person to verify their identity. At the current moment in time, my physical identity has not been verified by CAcert.org, but they have verified my email address. Installing their root certificate (see above) will thus automatically allow you to validate my digital signature. You can then be confident of the authenticity of my email address - only I have the ability to digitally sign my emails using my CAcert.org certificate, so if you get an email that I digitally signed and which is validated by your email software using the cacert.org root certificate that you installed, you know it's from me. (Visually you get a simple indication that my email is signed and trusted). Technically, they haven't verified that I really am me! But you have the guarantee that emails from my address are sent by the person who physically administers that address, i.e. me! The only way that someone could forge my digital signature would be if they logged on to my home computer (using the password) and ran my email software (using the password) to send you a digitally signed email from my address. Although I have noticed the cats watching me logon..."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:18
msgid "Select 'Bit length'. We advise a key length of 1024 bits."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:11
msgid "Select 'Create a new certificate'"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:55
msgid "Select 'Server Certificate' at the bottom of the tab in the 'Secure communications' section."
msgid "Select an easy to locate folder. You'll have to open this file up with Notepad. The CSR must be copied and pasted into our online form. Once the CSR has been submitted, you won't need this CSR any more as IIS won't reuse old CSR to generate new certificates."
msgid "So if you don't pass the audit, you don't get to be a Certificate Authority. And to pass the audit, well, you've got to show that you can do a good job issuing certificates. That they're secure, you only give them to the right people, etc. So what happens when you make a mistake and you erroneously issue a certificate that risks the entire Internet browsing population, like Verisign did? Well, er, nothing actually. They already paid for their audit, and damn it, they're so big now, we couldn't possibly revoke their Certificate Authority status. (There's too much money at stake!)"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:52
msgid "So, dammit, what's the point of all this then?"
msgid "Some of our advertisers use a third-party ad server to display ads. These ads may contain cookies. The ad server receives these cookies, and we don't have access to them."
msgid "Thanks for signing up with CAcert.org, below is the link you need to open to verify your account. Once your account is verified you will be able to start issuing certificates till your hearts' content!"
msgid "That situation has changed, and Internet Explorer, being the most obvious example, now insists that any Certificate Authorities are 'audited' by an 'independent' organisation, the American Institute for Certified Public Accountant's (AICPA). So now, if you have the money needed (from US$75000 up to US$250000 and beyond) you can get these accountants, who clearly know a lot about money, to approve you as having the required technical infrastructure and business processes to be a Certificate Authority. And they get a nice wad of money for the pleasure. And the Certificate Authorities, having a kind of monopoly as a result, charge a lot for certificates and also get a nice wad of money. And everyone's happy."
msgid "The Common Name is the fully qualified host and Domain Name or website address that you will be securing. Both 'www.cacert.org' and 'secure.cacert.com' are valid Common Names. IP addresses are usually not used."
msgid "The Web of Trust system CAcert uses is similar to that many involved with GPG/PGP use, they hold face to face meetings to verify each others photo identities match their GPG/PGP key information. CAcert differs however in that we have modified things to work within the PKI framework, for you to gain trust in the system you must first locate someone already trusted. The trust person depending how many people they've trusted or meet before will determine how many points they can issue to you (the number of points they can issue is listed in the locate assurer section). Once you've met up you can show your ID and you will need to fill out a CAP form which the person assuring your details must retain for verification reasons. You can also get trust points via the Trust Third Party system where you go to a lawyer, bank manager, accountant, or public notary/juctise of the peace and they via your ID and fill in the TTP form to state they have viewed your ID documents and it appears authentic and true. More information on the TTP system can be found in the TTP sub-menu"
msgid "The domain '%s' has been added to the system, however before any certificates for this can be issued you need to open the link in a browser that has been sent to your email address."
msgid "The domain '%s' is already in the system and is listed as valid. Can't continue."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/0.php:22
msgid "The email account section is for adding/updating/removing email accounts which can be used to issue client certificates against. The client certificate section steps you through generating a certificate signing request for one or more emails you've registered in the email account section."
msgid "The email address '%s' has been added to the system, however before any certificates for this can be issued you need to open the link in a browser that has been sent to your email address."
msgid "The only other way to receive assurance points is to have had your identity checked by a third party CA, whose policies are suitably set to not let identity fraud run rampent. Please contact us if you would like more details about this."
msgid "The page has been reproduced on %s with explicit permission from %sthe author%s with the information being copyrighted to the author (name with held by request)"
msgid "The point is, as the current situation holds, you should be weary of anyone making decisions for you (i.e. pre-installed certificates in your browser), and you should be weary of anyone else's certificates that you install. But at the end of the day, it all boils down to trust. If an independent Certificate Authority seems to be reputable to you, and you can find evidence to support this claim, there's no reason why you shouldn't trust it any less than you implicitly trust the people who have already made mistakes."
msgid "The purpose of digital signing is to prove, electronically, one's identity"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:27
msgid "The reason digital signatures prepare us for encryption is that if everyone were setup to be able to generate their own digital signatures, it would be technically very easy to make the next step from digital signatures to encryption. And that would be great for privacy, the fight against spamming, and a safer Internet."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/7.php:6
msgid "The requests sent to the root store, are stored in a file for another process triggered by cron to parse and sign them, then stored in a reply file to be sent back to the webserver. Causing things to be separated into different users, basic privilege separation stuff. So being actually able to hack the serial daemons will only at the VERY worst cause fraudulent certificates, not the root to be revealed."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/4.php:3
msgid "Then the system will try to generate some very random numbers to get a secure key."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/6.php:3
msgid "Then you need to generate a Certificate Signing Request, for more details go:"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/6.php:9
msgid "Then you need to submit the contents from the CSR file to CAcert, you need to go:"
msgid "There are a number of other mailing lists CAcert runs, some are general discussion, others are technical (such as the development list) or platform specific help (such as the list for Apple Mac users)"
msgid "There is several ways to become a CAcert Assurer, the most common of which is face to face meetings with existing assurers, who check your ID documents (you need to show 2 government issued photo ID where possible otherwise you won't be allocated as many points!)."
msgid "There were no valid CommonName fields on the CSR, or I was unable to match any of these against your account. Please review your CSR, or add and verify domains contained in it to your account before trying again."
msgid "There's nothing to it. I mean literally, you can already start sending your emails encrypted. Assuming of course you have your own digital signature certificate (e.g. as per above), and the person you want to send an encrypted email to also has a digital signature certificate, and has recently sent you a digitally signed email with it. If all these conditions hold, you just have to change the settings in your email software to send the email encrypted and hey presto! Your email software (probably Outlook I guess) should suss out the rest."
msgid "This person already has %s assurance points. Any points you give this person may be rounded down, or they may not even get any points. If you have less then 150 points you will still receive 2 points for assuring them."
msgid "This policy discloses what information we gather about you when you visit any of our Web site. It describes how we use that information and how you can control it."
msgid "Thus, having now asked the question, you suppose that it's the people who make the browser software that have carefully decided who is a trustworthy Certificate Authority. Funnily enough, the mainstream browsers have not, historically, had public policies on how they decide whether a Certificate Authority gets added to their browser. All of the Certificate Authorities that have found themselves in the browser software, are big names, probably with big profits (so they must be doing a good job!)."
msgid "To fully understand, read the section directly above. I am using a free Certificate Authority to provide me with the ability to digitally sign my emails. As a result, this Certificate Authority is not (yet) recognised by your email software as it is a new organisation that is not yet fully established, although it is probably being included in the Mozilla browser. If you choose to, you can go the their site at CAcert.org to install the root certificate. You may be told that the certificate is untrusted - that is normal and I suggest that you continue installation regardless. Be aware that this implies your acceptance that you trust their secure distribution and storing of digital signatures, such as mine. (You already do this all the time). The CAcert.org root certificate will then automatically provide the safe validation of my digital signature, which I have entrusted to them. Or you can simply decide that you've wasted your time reading this and do nothing (humbug!). Shame on you! :-)"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:2
msgid "To generate a public and private key pair and CSR for a Microsoft IIS 5 Server:"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:21
msgid "To get from computer Internet User A to Internet User B an email may pass through tens of anonymous computers on the Internet. These 'Internet infrastructure' computers are all free to inspect and change the contents of your email as they see fit. Governments systematically browse the contents of all emails going in/out/within their country, e.g. the"
msgid "Under 'Administrative Tools', open the 'Internet Services Manager'. Then open up the properties window for the website you wish to request the certificate for. Right-clicking on the particular website will open up its properties."
msgid "Warning! This site requires cookies to be enabled to ensure your privacy and security. This site uses session cookies to store temporary values to prevent people from copying and pasting the session ID to someone else exposing their account, personal details and identity theft as a result."
msgid "Warning! You've attempted to log into the system with a client certificate, but the login failed due to the certificate being expired, revoked or simply not valid for this site. You can login using your Email/Pass Phrase to get a new certificate, by clicking on 'Normal Login' to the right of your screen."
msgid "Wasn't able to match '%s' against any user in the system"
msgstr ""
#: www/account/39.php:34 www/index/10.php:34
msgid "We analyse visitors' use of our sites by tracking information such as page views, traffic flow, search terms, and click through. We use this information to improve our sites. We also share this anonymous traffic and demographic information in aggregate form with advertisers and other business partners. We do not share any information with advertisers that can identify an individual user."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/39.php:21 www/index/10.php:21
msgid "We collect two kinds of information about users: 1) data that users volunteer by signing up to our website or when you send us an email via our contact form; and 2) aggregated tracking data we collect when users interact with our site."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/39.php:29 www/index/10.php:29
msgid "We do not share your information with any other organisation."
msgstr ""
#: www/account/39.php:42 www/index/10.php:42
msgid "We don't use cookies to store personal information, we do use sessions, and if cookies are enabled, the session will be stored in a cookie, and we do not look for cookies, apart from the session id. However if cookies are disabled then no information will be stored on or looked for on your computer."
msgid "When you post to the contact form, you must provide your name and email address. When you sign up to the website, you must provide your name, email address date of birth and some lost pass phrase question and answers."
msgid "Why digitally sign your own emails?! (weirdo..)"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:6 www/help/2.php:32
msgid "Why is the digital signature described as 'not valid/not trusted'?"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/2.php:5 www/help/2.php:29
msgid "Why isn't it being adopted by everyone?"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/7.php:7
msgid "Why use serial you ask? Well certificate requests are low bandwidth for starters, then of course simpler systems in security are less prone to exploits, and finally serial code is pretty mature and well tested and hopefully all exploits were found and fixed a long time ago."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/7.php:8
msgid "With the proposed root certificate changes, there would be a new root, this would sign at least 1 sub-root, then the private key stored offline in a bank vault, with the sub-root doing all the signing, or alternatively 2 sub-roots, 1 for client certificates, one for server, the thinking behind this, if any of the sub-roots are compromised they can be revoked and reissued."
msgid "You are able to update, add and remove your information at any time via our web interface, log into the 'My Account' and then click on the 'My Details' section, and then click the relevant link"
msgstr ""
#: www/account/19.php:44 www/account/6.php:42
msgid "You are about to install a certificate, if you are using mozilla/netscape based browsers you will not be informed that the certificate was installed successfully, you can go into the options dialog box, security and manage certificates to view if it was installed correctly however."
msgid "You can also become a CAcert Assurer by seeking out a public notary, justice of the peace, accountant, lawyer or bank manager. You will need to download and print out a copy of the TTP.pdf and fill in your sections. You will need to produce a photo copy of your ID, which the person assurance you will inspect against the originals. Once they are satisfied the documents appear to be genuine they need to sign the back of the photo copies, and fill in their sections of the TTP document. Once you have had your ID verified by 2 different people, pop the copies + forms in an envelope and post them to:"
msgid "You can become a CAcert Assurer by seeking out trusted 3rd parties. You will also need to download and print out a copy of the TTP.pdf and fill in your sections. You will need to produce a photo copy of your ID, which the person assuring you will inspect against the originals. Once they are satisfied the documents appear to be genuine they need to sign the back of the photo copies, and fill in their sections of the TTP document. Once you have had your ID verified by 2 different people, pop the copies + forms in an envelope and post them to:"
msgid "You have now created a public/private key pair. The private key is stored locally on your machine. The public portion is sent to CAcert in the form of a CSR."
msgid "You must confirm it is your email address by responding to a 'ping' email sent to it."
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:86
msgid "You must confirm that you are the owner (or authorized administrator) of the domain by responding to a 'ping' email sent to either the email address listed in the whois record, or one of the RFC-mandatory addresses (hostmaster/postmaster/etc)."
msgid "You must sight at least one form of government issued photo identification. It's preferable if 2 forms of Government issued photo ID are presented, as less points may be issued if there is any doubt on the person by the person issuing points;"
msgid "You see this all the time on the Internet - every time you go to a secure page on a web site, for example to enter personal details, or to make a purchase, every day you browse web sites that have been digitally signed by a Certificate Authority that is accepted as having the authority to sign it. This is all invisible to the user, except that you may be aware that you are entering a secure zone (e.g. SSL and HTTPS)."
msgid "You were issued %s points and you now have %s points in total."
msgstr ""
#: www/index/0.php:106
msgid "You will need to be issued 100 points by meeting with existing assurers from the CAcert Web of Trust, who verify your identity using your government issued photo identity documents; OR if it is too difficult to meet up with existing assurers in your area, meet with two Trusted Third Party assurers (notary public, justice of the peace, lawyer, bank manager, accountant) to do the verifying."
msgid "You will now create a CSR. This information will be displayed on your certificate, and identifies the owner of the key to users. The CSR is only used to request the certificate. The following characters must be excluded from your CSR fields, or your certificate may not work:"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:66
msgid "You will see a confirmation screen."
msgstr ""
#: www/help/4.php:8
msgid "You will then be asked to enter information about your company into the certificate. Below is a valid example:"
msgstr ""
#: www/help/3.php:15
msgid "You'll prepare the request now, but you can only submit the request via the online request forms. We do not accept CSRs via email."
msgid "Your browser includes special digital (root) certificates from a number of these 'Certificate Authorities' by default, and all web sites use certificates that are validated by one of these companies, which you as a user implicitly trust every time you go to the secure part of a web site. (You might ask, who validates the security of the Certificate Authorities, and why should you trust them?!"
msgid "Your information has been submitted into our system. You will now be sent an email with a web link, you need to open that link in your web browser within 24 hours or your information will be removed from our system!"
msgid "lines. Do not copy any extra line feeds or carriage returns at the beginning or end of the certificate. Save the certificate into a text editor like Notepad. Save the certificate with an extension of .cer and a meaningful name like certificate.cer"