OP said something confusing about the Go compiler, so I was only added clarification for that one statement.
You walked by half listening to a conversation, stuck your head in the room and said something tangentially related but more confusing.
There are distribution and development certificates that can all be used for signing a binary. Different rules for each, and there's also auto-signed (com.apple.provenance). It's all documented on Apple's website if you want to read more about it. But I suspect you already know this and are just trying to pick a fight.
lapcat|1 month ago
What does that even mean? What exactly are you saying is not true?
It's not at all helpful or informative to keep saying "does not apply," as if that meant anything by itself.
fingerlocks|1 month ago
You walked by half listening to a conversation, stuck your head in the room and said something tangentially related but more confusing.
There are distribution and development certificates that can all be used for signing a binary. Different rules for each, and there's also auto-signed (com.apple.provenance). It's all documented on Apple's website if you want to read more about it. But I suspect you already know this and are just trying to pick a fight.