CMVP is managed by NIST and CSE, the Communications Security Establishment of the Canadian government. Products are certified under the FIPS CMVP (Cryptographic Module Validation Program). In 2001 a more stringent version of the standard was released called FIPS 140-2. FIPS 140-1 standard was created in 1994 and it specifies requirements for the proper design and implementation of products that perform cryptographic operations. and Canadian governments to guide their purchases of products that are intended to protect the security of electronic information and e-commerce. These standards have been adopted by the U.S.
National Institute of Standards and Testing (NIST) manages a number of FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standards) covering cryptography, that is, hardware or software that encrypts and decrypts data or performs other cryptographic operations (such as creating or verifying digital signatures). What is FIPS 140? The Computer Security Division of the U.S. JITC has replicated the DoD’s PKI environment to ensure a commercial product will meet their PKI standards when the product is fully deployed and in use within the DoD.ĬoreStreet’s Distributed OCSP Responder is JITC certified () and is the first and only distributed OCSP Responder certified by JITC.Ĭlick here to view the JITC approval letter. JITC is the Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) test and certification organization for the Department of Defense (DoD). In doing so, the RTC VA has become the world's only Distributed OCSP product to receive Common Criteria certification.ĭoD JITC (The Joint Interoperability Test Command) The US program for Common Criteria certification is called NIAP (National Information Assurance Partnership )ĬoreStreet's RTC Validation Authority has completed Common Criteria EA元 evaluation. Today the international community has embraced the CC through the Common Criteria Recognition Arrangement (CCRA) whereby the signers have agreed to accept the results of CC evaluations performed by other CCRA members.
The CC Project subsequently incorporated the minor changes that had resulted in the ISO process, producing CC version 2.1 in August 1999. This became ISO International Standard 15408 in 1999.
Based on a number of trial evaluations and an extensive public review, Version 1.0 was extensively revised and CC Version 2.0 was produced in April of 1998. Version 1.0 of the CC was completed in January 1996. In June 1993 the sponsored groups from the US, Canadian, and European started the Common Criteria (CC) Project to align their separate criteria into a single set of IT security criteria. DoD JITC (The Joint Interoperability Test Command) Common Criteria/NIAP (National Information Assurance Partnership)Ģ. Careers Site Map Library Legal Contact UsĬertificationsCoreStreet Security Standards Compliance:ġ.