Since Let’s Encrypt started issuing certificates in 2015, people have repeatedly requested the ability to get certificates for IP addresses, an option that only a few certificate authorities have offered. Until now, they’ve had to look elsewhere, because we haven’t provided that feature. Today, we’ve issued our first certificate for an IP address, as we announced we would in January. As with other new certificate features on our engineering roadmap, we’ll now start gradually rolling...| letsencrypt.org
Tailscale Vanity Domains and TLS| robert.sesek.com
We are excited to announce a new extension to Let’s Encrypt’s implementation of the ACME protocol that we are calling “profile selection.” This new feature will allow site operators and ACME clients to opt in to the next evolution of Let’s Encrypt. As of today, the staging environment is advertising a new field in its directory resource: GET /directory HTTP/1.1 HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json { ... "meta": { "profiles": { "classic": "The same profile you're accustomed...| letsencrypt.org
Caddy is a powerful, enterprise-ready, open source web server with automatic HTTPS written in Go| caddyserver.com
Caddy is a powerful, enterprise-ready, open source web server with automatic HTTPS written in Go| caddyserver.com
CAA is a type of DNS record that allows site owners to specify which Certificate Authorities (CAs) are allowed to issue certificates containing their domain names. It was first standardized in 2013, and the version we use today was standardized in 2019 by RFC 8659 and RFC 8657. By default, every public CA is allowed to issue certificates for any domain name in the public DNS, provided they validate control of that domain name.| letsencrypt.org
Let’s Encrypt provides rate limits to ensure fair usage by as many people as possible. We believe these rate limits are high enough to work for most people by default. We’ve also designed them so that renewing a certificate almost never hits a rate limit, and so that large organizations can gradually increase the number of certificates they can issue without requiring intervention from Let’s Encrypt. If you’re actively developing or testing a Let’s Encrypt client, please utilize our...| letsencrypt.org
Caddy is a powerful, enterprise-ready, open source web server with automatic HTTPS written in Go| caddyserver.com