Internet Security Research Group
The Internet Security Research Group (ISRG) is a Californian public-benefit corporation which focuses on Internet security. [1][2]
Founded | May 24, 2013 |
---|---|
Founders | Josh Aas, Eric Rescorla |
Type | 501(c)(3) non-profit organization |
46-3344200 | |
Registration no. | C3569614 |
Legal status | Active |
Focus | Internet Security |
Location |
|
Area served | Global |
Website | abetterinternet |
Let's Encrypt—its first major initiative—aims to make Transport Layer Security (TLS) certificates available for free in an automated fashion.
Josh Aas serves as the group's executive director and board chair.[3][4] The board also contains individuals from Cisco, University of Michigan, Mozilla, ACLU, CoreOS, Facebook, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation.[4]
Board members
- Josh Aas (Internet Security Research Group) — ISRG Executive Director
- J. Alex Halderman (University of Michigan)
- Laura Thomson (Mozilla)
- Aanchal Gupta (Facebook)
- Jennifer Granick (ACLU)
- Alex Polvi (CoreOS)
- Pascal Jaillon (OVH)
- Richard Barnes (Cisco Systems)
- Christine Runnegar (Internet Society)
- Max Hunter (Electronic Frontier Foundation)
gollark: £150 now gets you a very basic laptop assuming sales, it seems, so calculators should cost... lots less...
gollark: A DIY version of a graphical one would be much cheaper.
gollark: Plastic shell + a bunch of buttons + low-end CPU + solar panel + battery + LCD, and the higher end models are quite expensive.
gollark: The profit margins on calculators must be huge, come to think of it.
gollark: Where's "down here"? ~~The Inverted Gravity Zone~~ Australia?
References
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