Digital security specialist Trustis has introduced a new SSL-server
certificate service exclusively for the NHS. It is designed to overcome
the problems of payment for certificates and the provision of evidence
such as company registration numbers, by allowing any organisation
registered with the NHS Address Registration Service to apply for a
certificate using their NHS organisation code. “Most digital
certificate services assume that every organisation is the same and can
provide any type of evidence required”, explained Trustis MD Chris
Swinbank. “This certainly does not apply to most public bodies. Because
Trustis builds every PKI to order, we can optimise it for its community
of users. In this case we have been able to utilise information unique
to the NHS to make getting a certificate a lot simpler.
Suppliers also tend to want payment before issuing a certificate and
this means using a credit card. Organisations don’t usually have credit
cards that can be used for this type of purchase and employees often end
up using their own. We have developed a system that allows a certificate
to be supplied with a purchase order, which is simpler and makes the
process a lot faster; we will invoice the organisation in slower time.”
The service operates using Certificate Factory, a tScheme-approved
and BS7799-accredited certificate-manufacturing service run from the
company’s high-security Trust Service Centre. One, two and three-year
certificates are available singly or in bulk and can be purchased
online.
Source: bjhc&im September 2004
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