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489 points gslin | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.416s | source
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mrtksn ◴[] No.42191644[source]
Hands down one of the greatest services out there, stopped a racket and made the internet secure.

I remember a time when having an HTTPS connection was for "serious" projects only because the cost of the certificate was much higher than the domain. You go commando and if it sticks then you purchase a certificate for a 100 bucks or something.

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dachris ◴[] No.42191676[source]
There's still enough people out there who don't know better, manually (or auto-renew) purchasing new a certificate every year from their hosting provider like it's 2013.
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1. irjustin ◴[] No.42191800[source]
Related point - we interface with Singapore gov services (MYINFO).

They don't recognize LE nor AWS's certs. Only the big paid ones. Such an annoying process too - to pay, to obtain and update the certs.

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2. tialaramex ◴[] No.42191851[source]
I guess the good thing there is that it's absolutely transparent that this is just a way to make you pay somebody else. Like the Jones Act (Merchant Marine Act, but everybody just calls it the Jones Act). The US government doesn't get a slice if you want to buy ships to move stuff from one part of the US to another, but it does require that you buy the ships from an American shipyard, and so those yards needn't be internationally competitive because the US government has their back.

Nobody is like "Oh, the Jones Act ensures high quality ships" because it doesn't, the Jones Act just ensures that you're going to use those US shipyards, no matter what.

3. vmit ◴[] No.42192299[source]
Myinfo did away with certificate requirement altogether! Yay! (hello from Singapore)