Welcome to Digital Fruition, LLC's Certificate Authority

A Certificate Authority (CA) is a trusted entity that issues digital certificates. These certificates are used to verify the identity of organizations and individuals on the internet, ensuring secure communication and transactions.

About This CA

This Certificate Authority is operated by Digital Fruition, LLC for the purpose of providing digital certificates to its software, services, and clients. It ensures a trusted and secure communication channel for all associated services. The CA is established and managed by Josh Gitlin, reflecting our commitment to security and trustworthiness in digital communications.

Available Resources

Usage

To use this CA for verifying certificates or for incorporating into your system, download the public certificate and refer to your system's documentation on trusting new certificate authorities.

Contact

For questions, inquiries or issues related to this Certificate Authority, please contact [email protected].

Trusting the CA Certificate

To ensure secure communication, please install and trust the CA certificate on your system. Here are the instructions for macOS, Linux, and Windows:

macOS:

  1. Download the CA Certificate.
  2. Open Keychain Access (Applications > Utilities).
  3. Add the certificate to the System keychain (drag and drop or use File > Import Items).
  4. Trust the certificate by double-clicking it, expanding the Trust section, and selecting Always Trust.
  5. Close the certificate window and save changes if prompted.

Linux (Ubuntu):

  1. Download the CA Certificate.
  2. Copy the certificate to /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/
  3. Update the CA store with sudo update-ca-certificates.

Windows:

  1. Download the CA Certificate.
  2. Start the Certificate Import Wizard by double-clicking the certificate file and clicking Install Certificate.
  3. Select Local Machine and click Next.
  4. Place all certificates in the following store: Trusted Root Certification Authorities.
  5. Finish the installation and confirm any security prompts.

Note: Installing a CA certificate typically requires administrative privileges. Only trust certificates from known and trusted entities.