Certificate Authority definition
Certificate Authority means a third party approved by EGBC to issue Digital Certificates to Professional Registrants.
Certificate Authority means a certificate authority that issues digital certificates for the purpose of establishing secure Internet sessions between an Authorized Submitter and an ERDS. Certificate authorities also validate digital certificates presented as proof of identity.
Certificate Authority means an authority trusted by one or more Participants to generate and assign Certificates.
Examples of Certificate Authority in a sentence
Enterprise-Grade Cybersecurity Our enterprise grade solutions feature industry leading cybersecurity protections, including the use of Certificate Authority (CA) certificates on all enterprise-level devices.
More Definitions of Certificate Authority
Certificate Authority means an entity that issues digital certificates for use in performing electronic notarizations.
Certificate Authority or “CA” means a person or entity authorized to issue, suspend, or revoke Certificates. For purposes of this Agreement, Company is the Certificate Authority. “Intermediate CA” means a CA Certificate signed by a Root Certificate Intermediate that issues Certificates either to end- entities or other Certificate Authorities, but not both.
Certificate Authority means a party trusted by both the subject (owner) of the certificate and parties relying on the certificate, the identity of which to be notified by the DCC to the Contractor from time to time;
Certificate Authority has the meaning given in Part Q of this Schedule 1;
Certificate Authority means issuing function and digital key management to guarantee and maintain data transmission security of a payment transaction.
Certificate Authority. A trusted entity that is responsible for issuing and revoking Public Key Infrastructure-based certificates. These certificates are used to represent the different entities within the Hyperledger Fabric network. Transaction Flow. Hyperledger ▇▇▇▇▇▇ uses endorsement policies with a majority vote to ensure which chaincode can be executed and endorsed within the channel of a network [13, 31]. After that, the transaction flow can start (see figure 1) where a user tries to invoke a transaction through the Client. A transaction proposal is sent to the different Endorser peers who validate the transaction by executing the installed Chaincode which generates a response that is endorsed with the peer’s certificate and sent back. Having received an approved transaction, the Client sends this to the Orderer peer. The Orderer properly orders all transactions and sends a new block to all the organisations in the channel. Each transaction is then verified whether these are signed by the appropriate Endorser peers. If valid, then the committing peers update their local copy of the ledger.
Certificate Authority means a company, agency or other entity that issues, revokes and manages digital certificates assigned to Users, as may be more specifically described in the Purchase Documents.