(no title)
hstrauss | 11 years ago
This enables SHA-2 certificates. Deployment of the patch is another problem, since it's a HotFix (which may have enterprise-QA issues) and not intended for general use, AFAIK. Still, I've been using it since WS2008 originally came out.
Gregordinary|11 years ago
What that translates to is that it only gives Server 2003 SHA2 support as a client, not as a server. I.e. You can connect to sites that are using SHA2 certs, but you cannot bind a SHA2 cert to your own website in IIS 6/Server 2003.
So once SHA1 is completely deprecated, those hosting sites or legacy apps on Windows Server 2003 will not be able to upgrade to SHA2 certs.
[1] http://blogs.technet.com/b/pki/archive/2010/09/30/sha2-and-w...
yuhong|11 years ago