Either start making a profit by selling those customers their own
certificates (as many would argue they should have been forced to do in the
first place), or else hang their stores off of the other end of your URL by
placing them in subdirectories. I don't see much advantage to using
subdomains, since it's still a cert that has been issued to "netmonger.net"
and says nothing about the actual business using the cert.
Jim
----- Original Message -----
From: <chris+opensrs@netmonger.net>
To: <discuss-list@opensrs.org>
Sent: Friday, August 03, 2001 2:31 PM
Subject: Re: Web certificate pricing?
> On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 10:18:47AM -0400, Darryl Green wrote:
> > Yes...
> >
> > Our price is $99 for new (who let the lawyers out with the handling
fees --
> > there are no handling fees)...same price for renewals.
>
> Does that go for wildcart certs? Thawte has again changed their
> pricing - now they're going to be "licensed" on an individual basis.
>
> We have a bunch of individual *.netmonger.net sites for various
> functions (portal, online payment, domain registration, intranet,
> etc.) that seemed like a good application for a wildcart cert, back
> when they were the same $100 as the rest. Now we're being reamed
> because VeriSign doesn't want to "lose business" by ISPs hosting
> customer sites as subdomains.
> --
> Christopher Masto Senior Network Monkey NetMonger
Communications
> chris@netmonger.net info@netmonger.net
http://www.netmonger.net
>
> Free yourself, free your machine, free the daemon --
http://www.freebsd.org/
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