May 17, 2016 By Larry Loeb 2 min read

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) announced the introduction of Certbot, a Let’s Encrypt client designed to help websites encrypt traffic. It’s considered a beta right now, but the EFF predicts a release version by the end of the year.

What Does Let’s Encrypt Do?

Let’s Encrypt is an open certificate authority (CA) that issued its first certificate in September 2015. It entered a wide and public beta in December 2015, and in April of this year pulled itself out of the beta phase. It is now one of the largest CAs, used by millions of people around the world.

It is designed to bring encryption to all of the Internet by offering free certificates to website owners. Using the secure form of the hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) requires that a site have a verified certificate from a known CA. Getting such a certificate was a costly process before Let’s Encrypt was founded by the EFF, Mozilla and researchers from the University of Michigan.

There’s a New Client in Town

Certbot is a new client software that communicates with the Let’s Encrypt CA via a protocol called ACME. While there are other options using this same protocol, Certbot is “the most popular choice for organizations and developers that run their own webservers,” according to the EFF.

The EFF said that the Certbot team has worked to make the transition to this new client as seamless as possible. It also assured users that previously installed packages and third-party plugins should continue to work and receive updates without modification.

Plans Go Beyond Certbot

The EFF explained it has plans to help with “a number of the other tasks that currently make correct TLS deployment very difficult.” This includes improved detection, real-time vulnerability mitigation and more. Perhaps most importantly, the organization will provide “expanding support to install certificates and offer security enhancements to popular email server software.”

Let’s Encrypt is an ambitious effort with a goal to improve the security of the entire Internet. By combining CA activities with efforts like Certbot, the EFF has a far better chance of achieving its goal.

More from

FYSA – Adobe Cold Fusion Path Traversal Vulnerability

2 min read - Summary Adobe has released a security bulletin (APSB24-107) addressing an arbitrary file system read vulnerability in ColdFusion, a web application server. The vulnerability, identified as CVE-2024-53961, can be exploited to read arbitrary files on the system, potentially leading to unauthorized access and data exposure. Threat Topography Threat Type: Arbitrary File System Read Industries Impacted: Technology, Software, and Web Development Geolocation: Global Environment Impact: Web servers running ColdFusion 2021 and 2023 are vulnerable Overview X-Force Incident Command is monitoring the disclosure…

What does resilience in the cyber world look like in 2025 and beyond?

6 min read -  Back in 2021, we ran a series called “A Journey in Organizational Resilience.” These issues of this series remain applicable today and, in many cases, are more important than ever, given the rapid changes of the last few years. But the term "resilience" can be difficult to define, and when we define it, we may limit its scope, missing the big picture.In the age of generative artificial intelligence (gen AI), the prevalence of breach data from infostealers and the near-constant…

Airplane cybersecurity: Past, present, future

4 min read - With most aviation processes now digitized, airlines and the aviation industry as a whole must prioritize cybersecurity. If a cyber criminal launches an attack that affects a system involved in aviation — either an airline’s system or a third-party vendor — the entire process, from safety to passenger comfort, may be impacted.To improve security in the aviation industry, the FAA recently proposed new rules to tighten cybersecurity on airplanes. These rules would “protect the equipment, systems and networks of transport…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today