Frank Siebenlist writes:
With your proposed scheme, any "trusted" CA in Italy, Germany, even Holland..., would have the theoretical opportunity to issue a certificate that would impersonate the director of Berkeley, NCSA, Livermore, Los Alamos... and we would have no way to enforce any policy in real-time that could prevent it.
Of course, if you think the names in a certificate have an inherent meaning, and you don't use the issuer in the evaluation, you are stuck. This is the defect in the grid authentication scheme. Trying to fix this with name constraints is backwards in my opinion.
If this acceptable to all our end user organizations, we should happily adopt the web-browser trust model with paper CA policy statements... and I'm serious here.
Just what do you think we have now?