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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2024-06-29 14:46:44.438

Source: https://thehackernews.com/2024/06/google-to-block-entrust-certificates-in.html

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Google to Block Entrust Certificates in Chrome Starting November 2024. Google has announced that it's going to start blocking websites that use certificates from Entrust starting around November 1, 2024, in its Chrome browser, citing compliance failures and the certificate authority's inability to address security issues in a timely manner. "Over the past several years, publicly disclosed incident reports highlighted a pattern of concerning behaviors by Entrust that fall short of the above expectations, and has eroded confidence in their competence, reliability, and integrity as a publicly-trusted [certificate authority] owner," Google's Chrome security team said. To that end, the tech giant said it intends to no longer trust TLS server authentication certificates from Entrust starting with Chrome browser versions 127 and higher by default. However, it said that these settings can be overridden by Chrome users and enterprise customers should they wish to do so. Google further noted that certificate authorities play a privileged and trusted role in ensuring encrypted connections between browsers and websites, and that Entrust's lack of progress when it comes to publicly disclosed incident reports and unrealized improvement commitments poses risks to the internet ecosystem. The blocking action is expected to cover Windows, macOS, ChromeOS, Android, and Linux versions of the browser. The notable exception is Chrome for iOS and iPadOS, due to Apple's policies that don't permit the Chrome Root Store from being used. As a result, users navigating to a website that serves a certificate issued by Entrust or AffirmTrust will be greeted by an interstitial message that warns them that their connection is not secure and isn't private. Affected website operators are urged to move to a publicly-trusted certificate authority owner to minimize disruption by October 31, 2024. According to Entrust's website, its solutions are used by Microsoft, Mastercard, VISA, and VMware, among others. "While website operators could delay the impact of blocking action by choosing to collect and install a new TLS certificate issued from Entrust before Chrome's blocking action begins on November 1, 2024, website operators will inevitably need to collect and install a new TLS certificate from one of the many other CAs included in the Chrome Root Store," Google said. Continuous Attack Surface Discovery & Penetration Testing Continuously discover, prioritize, & mitigate exposures with evidence-backed ASM, Pentesting, and Red Teaming.

Daily Brief Summary

MISCELLANEOUS // Google to Block Entrust Certificates in Chrome by 2024

Google announced it will stop trusting TLS server authentication certificates from Entrust in Chrome starting November 2024, due to non-compliance and security management issues.

This change will affect Chrome versions 127 and higher, across Windows, macOS, ChromeOS, Android, and Linux, except for iOS and iPadOS due to Apple's policies.

The decision follows a series of publicly disclosed incidents which have raised concerns about Entrust’s competence and reliability as a certificate authority.

Chrome users and enterprise customers can manually override this setting if they choose to continue trusting certificates from Entrust.

Website operators using Entrust certificates are advised to switch to another publicly trusted certificate authority by October 31, 2024, to avoid service disruptions.

Chrome users attempting to access sites with Entrust certificates post-November 2024 will encounter warnings that their connections are not secure.

Despite Entrust's wide use among major corporations like Microsoft and Visa, Google's move reflects growing scrutiny over digital certificate providers and internet security standards.