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I'm looking at options to buy a code signing certificate for my company. I want it to be usable for MS Authenticode and also for Java and I want it to be trusted with the default trusted authority list that ships with a new install of Windows (ie. I don't want the use to have to add a new trusted authority). I've seen previous discussions recommending Comodo, but I'm a bit confused since I've checked the list of trusted authorities on my XP machine and I couldn't find Comodo. Also Comodo seems to have a somehow spotty reputation, issuing certificates to malware.

This kinda leaves me with Verisign (ie. the evil company that broke DNS for profit) or Thawte, and both cost an arm and a leg.

Are there other options I'm missing?

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http://www.globalsign.com has a complete focus on such matters, and is really good to work with.

AppCove, Inc. (day job) is a reseller and can provide quite good pricing, fyi....

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These guys look better than GoDaddy. They explain in clear language they are a trusted authority, and they support 64 bit Vista drivers, unlike GoDaddy. – Robert Harvey Jul 3 at 5:27
They seem decent indeed – Remus Rusanu Jul 3 at 5:35
I got cert from globalsign, I got scared is signed by intermediate authority when I first saw it, but is OK. I was testing it wrong. – Remus Rusanu Jul 12 at 3:53
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Actually, I think GoDaddy certificates will work. They are much less expensive than Verisign, and less than Thawte. I would ask them if they guarantee that their certificates will work in the manner you describe.

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Someone adverse to VeriSign for ethical reasons might not be particularly keen on GoDaddy... (qv nodaddy.com ) – AakashM Jul 3 at 5:09
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You need a trusted authority. Otherwise the users are going to be confronted with a nasty warning when they try to run the program. – Robert Harvey Jul 3 at 5:11
@Aakash: I'm not adverse to them on ethical grounds, but more on business grounds. If they broke the internet backbone, what's to stop them screwing me over? – Remus Rusanu Jul 3 at 5:18
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If you want to be allowed to pick up your crash dumps from WinQual, you'll have to use a Thawte certificate.

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