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I'm relatively new to Windows development, but have just finished a small project. I want to make my application "verified" like a lot of other applications are. For example, when you launch the application and UAC pops up, it won't have the "publisher unknown" message with the yellow bar and should have a "Verified by: " section on it.

I hope I explained that correctly. Does anyone know how to do this? I am hoping it's not like SSL certificates where you have to pay money...

Please feel free to let me know if my question was unclear or if I am not explaining it the right way. Thanks!

4 Answers 4

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Unfortunatley, yes, you do need to pay money.

What you need is a code signing certificate. You can get them from the below certificate authorities: Thawte

VeriSign

Or if you are looking for a cheap one, I would buy one from here, that is where I got mine: Tucows

Once you get your cert, you can integrate it into the build process to sign your application and it will show your name as the publisher.

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    I see, thanks for the information! After getting the certificate, I would use the "Signing" and "Security" tabs under Project Settings in Visual Studio to do the rest, right?
    – Aaron
    Mar 12, 2011 at 4:01
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    You can get discount Comodo certificates here: secure.ksoftware.net/code_signing.html [Disclosure: No affiliation to the website.] Mar 12, 2011 at 4:01
  • Silence Dogood: Tucows's discounted Comodo certs are cheaper. (-;
    – Eaton
    Mar 12, 2011 at 4:02
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    Does each certificate last for multiple software and revisions one may produce, or is it only valid for one?
    – Dan W
    Jun 27, 2013 at 12:20
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    You can sign any executable. It isn't locked to a specific, named application.
    – Eaton
    Jun 30, 2013 at 4:29
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This is known as code signing. If you want to generate your own certificate just for you, you can follow the instructions in this answer.

As Eaton suggests, you'll have to pay if you want one for public use. I recently purchased one for our BuildMaster software from http://www.instantssl.com/code-signing/index.html for 2 years at about $340.

Response to comment:

If I generated my own certificate, how would it work for me but not for everyone else (publicly)?

Steps 1 and 2 in the linked answer create a self-signed Certificate Authority (CA) and then add it to your Windows Certificate Store. Step 3 then generates the code signing certificate and specifies the issuing CA (the -ic switch). Since the issuer is a CA that was created in step 1 and then set to manually be trusted by you in step 2, the code signing certificate generated in step 3 appears to be signed by a trusted party on your machine.

There is no way it can be trusted by the public because you both generated the code signing certificate and the authority used to verify that its creator is actually who he says he is. Imagine if you were evil and put fake info in the code signing certificate that says the signer is Microsoft.com instead of Aaron! All certificates would useless if there was no trusted authority to verify the actual identity of signer.

When you order the certificate from a trusted CA, they'll verify your identity in some way. They'll probably ask for a scanned copy of your driver's license if it's for signing as your name, or something only the business owner would have like the articles of incorporation (we used our D&B D-U-N-S number to verify Inedo).

Once they have verified your or your company's identity, they'll send you a certificate that is trusted by typical web browsers that you can use to sign your executables and the public can be assured that it's actually you signing them because the CA would be whichever company you bought the certificate from. If you look in the Options section of your favorite web browser you can see which CAs are deemed trusted.

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  • Thanks. If I generated my own certificate, how would it work for me but not for everyone else (publicly)?
    – Aaron
    Mar 12, 2011 at 4:19
  • @Aaron - I have updated the post in response to your comment.
    – John Rasch
    Mar 12, 2011 at 7:44
  • see also "Drawback" of my answer
    – k3b
    Mar 12, 2011 at 8:12
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Beside bought certificates as @Eaton explained and selfcreated selfsigned certificates as @John Rasch suggested

you can try free comunitee-based certificates from http://cacert.org that works simmilar to pgp/gpg-s trustsystem. For codesigning you need a trust resumee of at least 100 points.

German users can also use free http://web.de certificates that also permits codesigning.

The drawback of this approach (as well as self-created certs) is that "verified" is only activ, if the operating system of the executing client has installed the root certificate of the signing agency which in 99% is not the case.

However Firefox knows cacert.org so certs from cacert can be used for https, java and silverlight but not for standard msie without installing the root certificate.

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You can also buy a code signing certificate from StartCom (www.startssl.com) for roughly $49.90 for two years - a lot cheaper than Thawte, Verisign and the rest.

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  • StartCom CA is closed since Jan. 1st, 2018, it doesn't issue any new certificate from StartCom name roots.
    – BoltBait
    Nov 23, 2022 at 18:48

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