£Á°èZ¨Ä…–K§‚«“ô4“ÒÙ´dîfUÙÃÅ WKbyʦ•ꎅȮFÒ¿ÊÎóCozá¬S@6{Í:›œêZÌ:Š•_%:¢¾¾~;‘Ã~芩ÊǍí`ÔÑ©ú뙵'5I¿fš×WO%ø9¾«¾DK|€ùÍD”Ýs]nHÕ¶êםӼ㞪éUWŸÈË%DÒÕ¬ï‘]/Åcx ‰ï2ß]ä6G[]S£Ôϯrs{úëóµmÒï#UQxo·õÞCe]"±/aÙ&Eã4ú9Jé_ÞåëdãöKë)AÞ ¯¹ægƒÛowЍø^d™ý½ßB7áyMä9ÜÖUã !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Certifi: Python SSL Certificates ================================ `Certifi`_ is a carefully curated collection of Root Certificates for validating the trustworthiness of SSL certificates while verifying the identity of TLS hosts. It has been extracted from the `Requests`_ project. Installation ------------ ``certifi`` is available on PyPI. Simply install it with ``pip``:: $ pip install certifi Usage ----- To reference the installed certificate authority (CA) bundle, you can use the built-in function:: >>> import certifi >>> certifi.where() '/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/certifi/cacert.pem' Enjoy! 1024-bit Root Certificates ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Browsers and certificate authorities have concluded that 1024-bit keys are unacceptably weak for certificates, particularly root certificates. For this reason, Mozilla has removed any weak (i.e. 1024-bit key) certificate from its bundle, replacing it with an equivalent strong (i.e. 2048-bit or greater key) certificate from the same CA. Because Mozilla removed these certificates from its bundle, ``certifi`` removed them as well. In previous versions, ``certifi`` provided the ``certifi.old_where()`` function to intentionally re-add the 1024-bit roots back into your bundle. This was not recommended in production and therefore was removed. To assist in migrating old code, the function ``certifi.old_where()`` continues to exist as an alias of ``certifi.where()``. Please update your code to use ``certifi.where()`` instead. ``certifi.old_where()`` will be removed in 2018. .. _`Certifi`: http://certifi.io/en/latest/ .. _`Requests`: http://docs.python-requests.org/en/latest/