Thank Dan Harkins, Linda Dunbar, Sean Turner, and Geoffrey Keatingįor reviewing this document and providing helpful comments. The editor of this document is Nikos The editor would like to The authors and editors were retained as in the original document. Of This Document" section indicates the goals for adopters of SSL Provide context for decisions taken in protocol design. The "US export rules"ĭiscussed in the document do not apply today but are kept intact to "Reserved Ports Assignment" section, and the cipher-suite registrator Such as the "Patent Statement" section, the However, portions of the original document that no longerĪpply were not included. There were no changes to the original document other than trivialĮditorial changes and the addition of a "Security Considerations" Protocol, that is, the November 18, 1996, version of the protocol. The original document should exist and for that reason, this documentĭescribes what is known as the last published version of the SSL 3.0 This allowed noĮasy referencing to the protocol. The IETF, except in several expired Internet-Drafts. Transport Layer Security (TLS), it was never formally published by Pioneer in secure communications protocols, and the basis for The protocol allows client/serverĪpplications to communicate in a way that is designed to preventĮavesdropping, tampering, or message forgery.Īlthough the SSL 3.0 protocol is a widely implemented protocol, a This document specifies version 3.0 of the Secure Sockets Layer (SSLģ.0) protocol, a security protocol that provides communications This document is published as a historical record of the SSL 3.0 The Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Protocol Version 3.0 FreierĬategory: Historic Netscape Communications Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) A. RFC 6101: The Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Protocol Version 3.0
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |