

This document was approved for publication by the ISRG Policy Management Authority, and is made available at. This is the ISRG Certification Practices Statement. View a copy of this license, visit or send a letter to CreativeĬommons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

The following Certification Authorities are covered under this CPS: CA Type Per IETF PKIX RFC 3647, this CPS is divided into nine components that cover security controls, practices, and procedures for certification services provided by the ISRG PKI. Other documents related to the behavior and control of the ISRG PKI, such as a Subscriber Agreement and Privacy Policy, can be found at. In the event of any inconsistency between this document and those Requirements, those Requirements take precedence over this document. The ISRG PKI conforms to the current version of the Baseline Requirements for the Issuance and Management of Publicly-Trusted Certificates published at. ISRG PKI services are most commonly, but not necessarily exclusively, provided under the brand/trademark "Let's Encrypt". These services are provided to the general public with exceptions as deemed appropriate by ISRG management or in accordance with relevant law. It is recommended that readers familiarize themselves with the ISRG CP prior to reading this document. ISRG PKI services include, but are not limited to, issuing, managing, validating, revoking, and renewing publicly-trusted Certificates in accordance with the requirements of the ISRG Certificate Policy (CP) and in a manner consistent with this CPS. Still, I'll reiterate what I said at spite the problems it is going to cause me, I am still glad to finally see Flash go.This Certification Practice Statement ("CPS") document outlines the certification services practices for Internet Security Research Group ("ISRG") Public Key Infrastructure ("ISRG PKI"). I'm sure I'm not the only one who will face the sudden death of necessary functionality once Flash is completely done for, so there is going to be a bit of an adjustment period for those still using legacy Flash material. Once Flash is totally killed, I will lose any ability to manage that NAS. The problem is, the entire administrative UI.the ENTIRE UI.runs in Flash. Ancient in tech terms, yes.but, it's still working perfectly fine and meeting my current needs. I have a NAS that's approximately ten years old. It long outlived its welcome nearly a decade ago, but I imagine legacy apps are likely what kept it going past its prime.Īnd thus we get into the "problems I personally will be facing". First off, despite the problems I personally will be facing from not being able to run Flash content (discussed in the next paragraph), I want to say good riddance, it's about time Flash finally got the axe.
