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| SSL: Data security layer |
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The TCP/IP Protocol governs the transport and routing of data over the Internet.
Other protocols, such as the HyperText Transport Protocol (HTTP), Lightweight
Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), or Internet Messaging Access Protocol (IMAP),
run "on top of" TCP/IP in the sense that they all use TCP/IP to support typical
application tasks such as displaying web pages or running email servers.
The SSL protocol runs above TCP/IP and below higher-level protocols such as HTTP or IMAP.
It uses TCP/IP on behalf of the higher-level protocols, and in the process allows
an SSL-enabled server to authenticate itself to an SSL-enabled client, allows
the client to authenticate itself to the server, and allows both machines to
establish an encrypted connection.
These capabilities address fundamental concerns about communication over the Internet
and other TCP/IP networks:
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SSL server authentication allows a user to confirm a server's identity.
SSL-enabled client software can use standard techniques of public-key cryptography to
check that a server's certificate and public ID are valid and have been issued by
a certificate authority (CA) listed in the client's list of trusted CAs.
This confirmation might be important if the user, for example, is sending
a credit card number over the network and wants to check the receiving server's identity.
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SSL client authentication allows a server to confirm a user's identity.
Using the same techniques as those used for server authentication, SSL-enabled
server software can check that a client's certificate and public ID are valid
and have been issued by a certificate authority (CA) listed in the server's list
of trusted CAs. This confirmation might be important if the server, for example,
is a bank sending confidential financial information to a customer and wants
to check the recipient's identity.
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An encrypted SSL connection requires all information sent between a
client and a server to be encrypted by the sending software and decrypted by
the receiving software, thus providing a high degree of confidentiality.
Confidentiality is important for both parties to any private transaction.
In addition, all data sent over an encrypted SSL connection is protected with
a mechanism for detecting tampering--that is, for automatically determining
whether the data has been altered in transit.
The SSL protocol includes two sub-protocols: the SSL record protocol and the SSL
handshake protocol. The SSL record protocol defines the format used to transmit data.
The SSL handshake protocol involves using the SSL record protocol to exchange a series
of messages between an SSL-enabled server and an SSL-enabled client when they first
establish an SSL connection. This exchange of messages is designed to facilitate the
following actions:
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Authenticate the server to the client.
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Allow the client and server to select the cryptographic algorithms, or ciphers,
that they both support.
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Optionally authenticate the client to the server.
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Use public-key encryption techniques to generate shared secrets.
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Establish an encrypted SSL connection.
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