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  • Learn More

    Comodo CA Sees 35 Percent Year-Over-Year Increase in EV Certificates

    A Press Release from Sectigo

    Press Release Mar 22, 2018

    EV SSL will be a topic of discussion at the Comodo CA booth during RSA 2018

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    What Chrome's New Certificate Requirement means to Your Organization

    A Blog Post from Sectigo

    Blog Post Mar 14, 2018

    In April 2018, Google's Chrome browser will begin requiring that all publicly-trusted server certificates issued by CAs such as Comodo CA are logged in public Certificate Transparency (CT) logs.

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    Trustico® Abandons Symantec® to Offer Comodo CA SSL Certificates

    A Blog Post from Sectigo

    Blog Post Feb 15, 2018

    Companies are feeling the impact of the looming browser warnings and are moving quickly. Companies like Trustico aren’t taking any chances, and just announced that effective immediately, it will no longer offer Symantec branded SSL certificates.

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    Comodo CA Surpasses 100 Million Issued Website Certificates

    A Blog Post from Sectigo

    Blog Post Jan 31, 2018

    Comodo CA has reached a significant milestone, having issued more than 100 million digital website certificates.

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    Changes Coming to Comodo CA Certificate Lifetime Policies

    A Blog Post from Sectigo

    Blog Post Jan 17, 2018

    Beginning March 1, 2018, Comodo CA will reduce the maximum lifetime for all SSL (TLS) certificates to a maximum of 825 days, or just over 27-months. This timeline is down from the current term of 39-months, meaning the maximum validity for an SSL certificate will be two years. Three-year certificates will be removed as options from our retail website, API’s and provisioning portals.

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    Google Browser Warnings: Be Sure Your Site Is Secure

    A Blog Post from Sectigo

    Blog Post Jan 08, 2018

    It’s no secret that Google has announced its distrust of certain SSL certificate issuers. As a result, Google, Mozilla and others are now displaying warnings, which can turn a would-be customer into a lost opportunity, leading to less traffic and less revenue.

    These warnings will continue to escalate throughout the year, based on Google’s scheduled Chrome releases.