Jump to content

Meta-Certificate Working Group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Meta-Certificate Working Group (MCWG), also called the Meta-Certificate Group (MCG), was an Internet work group on information security.

The MCWG was founded by Ed Gerck in 1997 and had participants from 26 countries. The discussions were public as in a list server but with a privacy innovation—the participants' names and email addresses were anonymized. This privacy feature, which any participant could break voluntarily by simply disclosing name and email address in the list, allowed the discussion to proceed on a technical level more easily, with less ad hominem attacks. This also allowed unwitting competitors to collaborate, creating an open climate.

The work developed by the MCWG has been applied to Internet standards and practical developments in several work groups and companies worldwide.[1][2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Definition of Trust in terms of Information Theory: Trust Points by Ed Gerck, in Digital Certificates: Applied Internet Security by J. Feghhi, J. Feghhi and P. Williams, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-30980-7, 1998.
  2. ^ "Overview of Certification Systems: x.509, CA, PGP and SKIP, in The Black Hat Briefings '99". Archived from the original on 2008-09-05. Retrieved 2007-04-30.
[edit]
  • MCWG Website - The current MCWG website is a "Read-Only Internet Landmark" that preserves the content that was created from 1997 to 2000. Some links are not operational, including the list servers.