cross-posted from: https://lemmy.one/post/5660007
Likely under the command of law enforcement and without informing any clients.
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More discussion https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37955264
This is why self hosted to me means actually running it on my own hardware in a location I have at least some control of physical access.
That said, an ISP could perform the same attack on a server hosted in your home using the HTTP-01 ACME challenge, so really no one is safe.
HSTS+certificate pinning, and monitoring new certificates issued for your domains using Certificate Transparency (crt.sh can be used to view these logs) is probably the only way to catch this kind of thing.
Post title is missing Linode.
Good suggestions at the bottom.
There are several indications which could be used to discover the attack from day 1:
deleted by creator
so per wikipedia and confirmed at MDN, firefox is the only major browser line not to consider certificate transparency at all. and yet it’s the only one that has given me occasional maddening SSL errors that have blocked site access (not always little sites, it’s happened with amazon).
i don’t understand how firefox can be simultaneously the least picky about certificates and the most likely to spuriously decide they’re invalid.
Is it tame for selfhosted to switch to DANE?
Yes. All hosting providers will comply with requests from law enforcement.
Signal and proton mail were forced to hand out information as well in the past. All you can do is choose which provider you distrust the least.
My domain has two certs issued to it. Am I in trouble?
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:
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