Cybersecurity Reference > Glossary
Digital Certificate
A digital certificate is a cryptographic document that verifies the identity of an entity and binds it to a public key.
Digital certificates serve as electronic credentials, functioning much like a digital passport or driver's license to establish trust in online communications and transactions.
These certificates are issued by trusted Certificate Authorities (CAs) after verifying the identity of the requesting entity, whether an individual, organization, or device. The certificate contains essential information including the subject's name, public key, issuer details, validity period, and a digital signature from the CA that guarantees its authenticity.
Digital certificates enable secure communications through public key infrastructure (PKI), supporting critical security functions like SSL/TLS encryption for websites, email encryption, code signing, and user authentication. When you see a padlock icon in your web browser, it indicates the website has presented a valid digital certificate.
Common types include SSL/TLS certificates for websites, email certificates for secure messaging, and code signing certificates for software verification. The certificate validation process involves checking the certificate chain back to a trusted root CA, ensuring the certificate hasn't expired or been revoked, and confirming the certificate matches the intended use case.
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