I love the NO Intro and super short Outro! I know that some youtubers really spend a lot of effort (or money) on fancy intros and outros and animations, but ME PERSONALLY, I really prefer the no-fluff style with good content. Well, not arrogant is also a good plus, but good content wins for me every time! Thanks mate! 🤘😎
The explanation for the answers in question 1 seems confusing. The certificate shown has PEM headers (-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- and -----END CERTIFICATE-----), which indicates it is in PEM format (ASCII). However, CER is typically associated with the DER format, which is binary. Could you clarify why CER is marked as correct when the certificate clearly has PEM headers indicating it is in ASCII format?
I know this is an older comment, but just in case it helps someone in the future with a similar concern. The .cer certificate file can be in either Base64 OR DER format. So that's why it can work in that selection of answers.
I love the NO Intro and super short Outro! I know that some youtubers really spend a lot of effort (or money) on fancy intros and outros and animations, but ME PERSONALLY, I really prefer the no-fluff style with good content. Well, not arrogant is also a good plus, but good content wins for me every time! Thanks mate! 🤘😎
The material covered here was on the 601 objectives under 3.9 public key infrastructure. I'm not seeing it all on the 701 objectives.
don’t study it, there are other PBQ videos that are accurate though
All the stuff and no fluff....Many thanks!
The explanation for the answers in question 1 seems confusing. The certificate shown has PEM headers (-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- and -----END CERTIFICATE-----), which indicates it is in PEM format (ASCII). However, CER is typically associated with the DER format, which is binary. Could you clarify why CER is marked as correct when the certificate clearly has PEM headers indicating it is in ASCII format?
Both PEM and DER can be seen as a .cer extension
I know this is an older comment, but just in case it helps someone in the future with a similar concern. The .cer certificate file can be in either Base64 OR DER format. So that's why it can work in that selection of answers.
Bins Squares
Thanks mate
Thank you!!
Nice one bro