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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<!-- This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
+ - License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
+ - file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. -->
+
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd"[
+ <!ENTITY % brandDTD SYSTEM "chrome://branding/locale/brand.dtd" >
+ %brandDTD;
+]>
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+<title>Glossary</title>
+<link rel="stylesheet" href="helpFileLayout.css"
+ type="text/css"/>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+<div class="boilerPlate">This glossary is provided for your information only,
+ and is not meant to be relied upon as a complete or authoritative description
+ of the terms defined below or of the privacy and/or security ramifications of
+ the technologies described.</div>
+
+<h1 id="glossary">Glossary</h1>
+
+<dl>
+
+<dt id="authentication">authentication</dt><dd>The use of a password,
+ certificate, personal identification number (PIN), or other information to
+ validate an identity over a computer network. See also
+ <a href="#password-based_authentication">password-based authentication</a>,
+ <a href="#certificate-based_authentication">certificate-based
+ authentication</a>, <a href="#client_authentication">client
+ authentication</a>, <a href="#server_authentication">server
+ authentication</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="bookmark">bookmark</dt><dd>A stored <a href="#web_page">web page</a>
+ address (<a href="#url">URL</a>) that you can go to easily by clicking a
+ bookmark icon in the <a href="#personal_toolbar">Personal Toolbar</a> or
+ choosing the bookmark&apos;s name from the Bookmarks menu.</dd>
+
+<dt id="ca">CA</dt><dd>See <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate
+ authority (CA)</a></dd>
+
+<dt id="ca_certificate">CA certificate</dt><dd>A certificate that
+ identifies a certificate authority. See also
+ <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate authority (CA)</a>,
+ <a href="#subordinate_ca">subordinate CA</a>, <a href="#root_ca">root
+ CA</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="cache">cache</dt><dd>A collection of web page copies stored
+ on your computer&apos;s hard disk or in its random-access memory (RAM). The
+ browser accumulates these copies as you browse the Web. When you click a link
+ or type a <a href="#url">URL</a> to fetch a particular web page for which the
+ cache already contains a copy, the browser compares the cached copy to the
+ original. If there have been no changes, the browser uses the cached copy
+ rather than refetching the original, saving processing and download
+ time.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate">certificate</dt><dd>The digital equivalent of an ID card.
+ A certificate specifies the name of an individual, company, or other entity
+ and certifies that a public key, which is included in the certificate,
+ belongs to that entity. When you digitally sign a message or other data, the
+ digital signature for that message is created with the aid of the private key
+ that corresponds to the public key in your certificate. A certificate is
+ issued and digitally signed by a <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate
+ authority (CA)</a>. A certificate&apos;s validity can be verified by checking
+ the CA&apos;s <a href="#digital_signature">digital signature</a>. Also called
+ digital ID, digital passport, public-key certificate, X.509 certificate, and
+ security certificate. See also <a href="#public-key_cryptography">public-key
+ cryptography</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate_authority">certificate authority (CA)</dt><dd>A service
+ that issues a certificate after verifying the identity of the person or
+ entity the certificate is intended to identify. A CA also renews and revokes
+ certificates and generates a list of revoked certificates at regular
+ intervals. CAs can be independent vendors or a person or organization using
+ certificate-issuing server software (such as &brandShortName; Certificate
+ Management System). See also <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>,
+ <a href="#crl">CRL (certificate revocation list)</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate_backup_password">certificate backup password</dt><dd>A
+ password that protects a certificate that you are backing up or have
+ previously backed up. Certificate Manager asks you to set this password when
+ you back up a certificate, and requests it when you attempt to restore a
+ certificate that has previously been backed up.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate-based_authentication">certificate-based
+ authentication</dt><dd>Verification of identity based on certificates and
+ public-key cryptography. See also
+ <a href="#password-based_authentication">password-based
+ authentication</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate_chain">certificate chain</dt><dd>A hierarchical series of
+ certificates signed by successive certificate authorities. A CA certificate
+ identifies a <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate authority (CA)</a>
+ and is used to sign certificates issued by that authority. A CA certificate
+ can in turn be signed by the CA certificate of a parent CA and so on up to a
+ <a href="#root_ca">root CA</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate_fingerprint">certificate fingerprint</dt><dd>
+ A unique number associated with a certificate. The number is not part of
+ the certificate itself but is produced by applying a mathematical function to
+ the contents of the certificate. If the contents of the certificate change,
+ even by a single character, the function produces a different number.
+ Certificate fingerprints can therefore be used to verify that certificates
+ have not been tampered with.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate_manager">Certificate
+ Manager</dt><dd>The part of the browser that allows you to view and manage
+ certificates. To view the main Certificate Manager window: Open the
+ <span class="mac">&brandShortName;</span> <span class="noMac">Edit</span>
+ menu, choose Preferences, click Privacy and Security, and then click Manage
+ Certificates.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate_renewal">certificate renewal</dt><dd>The process of
+ renewing a <a href="#certificate">certificate</a> that is about to
+ expire.</dd>
+
+<dt id="certificate_verification">certificate verification</dt><dd>When
+ <a href="#certificate_manager">Certificate Manager</a> verifies a
+ certificate, it confirms that the digital signature was created by a CA whose
+ own CA certificate is both on file with Certificate Manager and marked as
+ trusted for issuing that kind of certificate. It also confirms that the
+ certificate being verified has not itself been marked as untrusted. Finally,
+ if the <a href="#ocsp">OCSP (Online Certificate Status Protocol)</a> has been
+ activated, Certificate Manager also performs an online check. It does so by
+ looking up the certificate in a list of valid certificates maintained at a
+ <a href="#url">URL</a> that is specified either in the certificate itself or
+ in the browser&apos;s Validation preferences. If any of these checks fail,
+ Certificate Manager marks the certificate as unverified and won&apos;t
+ recognize the identity it certifies.</dd>
+
+<dt id="cipher">cipher</dt><dd>See
+ <a href="#cryptographic_algorithm">cryptographic algorithm</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="client">client</dt><dd>Software (such as browser software) that sends
+ requests to and receives information from a <a href="#server">server</a>,
+ which is usually running on a different computer. A computer on which client
+ software runs is also described as a client.</dd>
+
+<dt id="client_authentication">client authentication</dt><dd>The process of
+ identifying a <a href="#client">client</a> to a <a href="#server">server</a>,
+ for example with a name and password or with a
+ <a href="#client_ssl_certificate">client SSL certificate</a> and some
+ digitally signed data. See also <a href="#ssl">SSL (Secure
+ Sockets Layer)</a>, <a href="#server_authentication">server
+ authentication</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="client_ssl_certificate">client SSL certificate</dt><dd>A certificate
+ that a <a href="#client">client</a> (such as browser software) presents to a
+ <a href="#server">server</a> to authenticate the identity of the client
+ (or the identity of the person using the client) using the
+ <a href="#ssl">SSL (Secure Sockets Layer)</a> protocol. See
+ also <a href="#client_authentication">client authentication</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="component_bar">Component Bar</dt><dd>The toolbar located at the bottom
+ left of any &brandShortName; window. The Component Bar allows you to switch
+ between &brandShortName; components by clicking icons for Browser,
+ Mail &amp; Newsgroups, Composer, and so on.</dd>
+
+<dt id="cookie">cookie</dt><dd>A small bit of information stored on your
+ computer by some <a href="#web_site">websites</a>. When you visit such a
+ site, the site asks your browser to place one or more cookies on your hard
+ disk. Later, when you return to the site, your browser sends the site the
+ cookies that belong to it. Cookies help websites keep track of information
+ about you, such as the contents of your shopping cart. You can set your
+ cookie preferences to control how cookies are used and how much information
+ you are willing to let websites store on them. See also
+ <a href="#foreign_cookie">foreign cookie</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="cookie_manager">Cookie Manager</dt><dd>The part of the browser
+ that you can use to control <a href="#cookie">cookies</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="crl">CRL (certificate revocation list)</dt><dd>A list of revoked
+ certificates that is generated and signed by a
+ <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate authority (CA)</a>. You can
+ download the latest CRL to your browser or to a server, then check against it
+ to make sure that certificates are still valid before permitting their use
+ for authentication.</dd>
+
+<dt id="cryptographic_algorithm">cryptographic algorithm</dt><dd>A set of
+ rules or directions used to perform cryptographic operations such as
+ <a href="#encryption">encryption</a> and
+ <a href="#decryption">decryption</a>. Sometimes called a
+ <em>cipher.</em></dd>
+
+<dt id="cryptography">cryptography</dt><dd>The art and practice of scrambling
+ (encrypting) and unscrambling (decrypting) information. For example,
+ cryptographic techniques are used to scramble an unscramble information
+ flowing between commercial websites and your browser. See also
+ <a href="#public-key_cryptography">public-key cryptography</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="decryption">decryption</dt><dd>The process of unscrambling data that
+ has been encrypted. See also <a href="#encryption">encryption</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="digital_id">digital ID</dt><dd>
+ See <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="digital_signature">digital signature</dt><dd>A code created from both
+ the data to be signed and the private key of the signer. This code is unique
+ for each new piece of data. Even a single comma added to a message changes
+ the digital signature for that message. Successful validation of your digital
+ signature by appropriate software not only provides evidence that you
+ approved the transaction or message, but also provides evidence that the data
+ has not changed since you digitally signed it. A digital signature has
+ nothing to do with a handwritten signature, although it can sometimes be used
+ for similar legal purposes. See also
+ <a href="#nonrepudiation">nonrepudiation</a>,
+ <a href="#tamper_detection">tamper detection</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="distinguished_name">distinguished name (DN)</dt><dd>A specially
+ formatted name that uniquely identifies the subject of a
+ <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="dual_key_pairs">dual key pairs</dt><dd>Two public-private key
+ pairs&mdash;four keys altogether&mdash;corresponding to two separate
+ certificates. The private key of one pair is used for signing operations, and
+ the public and private keys of the other pair are used for encryption and
+ decryption operations. Each pair corresponds to a separate
+ <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>. See also
+ <a href="#public-key_cryptography">public-key cryptography</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="eavesdropping">eavesdropping</dt><dd>Surreptitious interception of
+ information sent over a network by an entity for which the information is not
+ intended.</dd>
+
+<dt id="encryption">encryption</dt><dd>The process of scrambling information in
+ a way that disguises its meaning. For example, encrypted connections between
+ computers make it very difficult for third-parties to unscramble, or
+ <em>decrypt</em>, information flowing over the connection. Encrypted
+ information can be decrypted only by someone who possesses the appropriate
+ key. See also <a href="#public-key_cryptography">public-key
+ cryptography</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="encryption_certificate">encryption certificate</dt><dd>A
+ <a href="#certificate">certificate</a> whose public key is used for
+ encryption only. Encryption certificates are not used for signing operations.
+ See also <a href="#dual_key_pairs">dual key pairs</a>,
+ <a href="#signing_certificate">signing certificate</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="encryption_key">encryption key</dt><dd>A private key used for
+ encryption only. An encryption key and its equivalent private key, plus a
+ <a href="#signing_key">signing key</a> and its equivalent public key,
+ constitute a <a href="#dual_key_pairs">dual key pairs</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="fingerprint">fingerprint</dt><dd>See
+ <a href="#certificate_fingerprint">certificate fingerprint</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="fips_pubs_140-1">FIPS PUBS 140-1</dt><dd>Federal Information Processing
+ Standards Publications (FIPS PUBS) 140-1 is a US government standard for
+ implementations of cryptographic modules&mdash;that is, hardware or software
+ that encrypts and decrypts data or performs other cryptographic operations
+ (such as creating or verifying digital signatures). Many products sold to the
+ US government must comply with one or more of the FIPS standards.</dd>
+
+<dt id="foreign_cookie">foreign cookie</dt><dd>A <a href="#cookie">cookie</a>
+ from one site that gets stored on your computer when you visit a different
+ site. Sometimes a <a href="#web_site">website</a> displays content that is
+ hosted on another website. That content can be anything from an image to text
+ or an advertisement. The second website that hosts such elements also has the
+ ability to store a cookie in your browser, even though you don&apos;t visit
+ it directly. Also known as <q>third-party cookie</q>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="form_manager">Form Manager</dt><dd>The part of the browser that can
+ help you save the personal data you enter into online forms, such as your
+ name, address, phone, and so on. Then, when a website presents you with a
+ form, Form Manager can fill it in automatically.</dd>
+
+<dt id="frame">frame</dt><dd>Frames are <a href="#web_page">web pages</a>
+ contained inside of an all-encompasssing <q>meta</q> page.</dd>
+
+<dt id="ftp">FTP (File Transfer Protocol)</dt><dd>A
+ standard that allows users to transfer files from one computer to another
+ over a network. You can use your browser to fetch files using FTP.</dd>
+
+<dt id="gopher">Gopher</dt><dd>A protocol used to search and retrieve
+ information on Internet <a href="#server">servers</a>, common before the
+ emergence of the <a href="#world_wide_web">World Wide Web</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="helper_application">helper application</dt><dd>Any application that is
+ used to open or view a file downloaded by the browser. A
+ <a href="#plugin">plugin</a> is a special kind of helper application that
+ installs itself into the Plugins directory of the main browser installation
+ directory and can typically be opened within the browser itself (internally).
+ Microsoft Word, Adobe Photoshop, and other external applications are
+ considered helper applications but not plugins, since they don&apos;t
+ install themselves into the browser directory, but can be opened from the
+ download dialog box.</dd>
+
+<dt id="home_page">home page</dt><dd>The page your browser is set to display
+ every time you launch it or when you click the Home button. Also used to
+ refer to the main page for a website, from which you can explore the rest of
+ the site.</dd>
+
+<dt id="html">HTML (HyperText Markup Language)</dt><dd>The document format used
+ for web pages. The HTML standard defines tags, or codes, used to define the
+ text layout, fonts, style, images, and other elements that make up a web
+ page.</dd>
+
+<dt id="http">HTTP (HyperText Transfer Protocol)</dt><dd>The protocol used to
+ transfer <a href="#web_page">web pages</a> (HyperText documents) between
+ browsers and <a href="#server">servers</a> over the
+ <a href="#world_wide_web">World Wide Web</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="https">HTTPS (HyperText Transfer Protocol Secure)</dt><dd>The secure
+ version of the HTTP protocol that uses <a href="#ssl">SSL</a> to ensure the
+ privacy of customer data (such as credit card information) while en route
+ over the <a href="#internet">Internet</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="imap">IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol)</dt><dd>A standard mail
+ server protocol that allows you to store all your messages and any changes to
+ them on the server rather than on your computer&apos;s hard disk. Using IMAP
+ rather than <a href="#pop">POP</a> saves disk space and allows you to access
+ your entire mailbox, including sent mail, drafts, and custom folders, from
+ any location. Using an IMAP server over a modem is generally faster than
+ using a POP mail server, since you initially download message headers only.
+ Not all <a href="#isp">ISPs</a> support IMAP.</dd>
+
+<dt id="implicit_consent">implicit consent</dt><dd>Also known as implied or
+ <q>opt-out</q> consent. Used to describe privacy settings that may allow
+ websites to gather information about you (for example by means of
+ <a href="#cookie">cookies</a> and online forms) unless you explicitly choose
+ to withhold your consent by selecting an option on a page that the website
+ provides for that purpose. Your consent may not be requested when the
+ information is actually gathered.</dd>
+
+<dt id="internet">Internet</dt><dd>A worldwide network of millions of computers
+ that communicate with each other using standard protocols such as
+ <a href="#tcp_ip">TCP/IP</a>. Originally developed for the US military in
+ 1969, the Internet grew to include educational and research institutions and,
+ in the late 1990s, millions of businesses, organizations, and individuals.
+ Today the Internet is used for email, browsing the
+ <a href="#world_wide_web">World Wide Web (WWW)</a>, instant messaging,
+ usegroups, and many other purposes.</dd>
+
+<dt id="ip_address">IP address (Internet protocol address)</dt><dd>The address
+ of a computer on a <a href="#tcp_ip">TCP/IP</a> network. Every computer on
+ the <a href="#internet">Internet</a> has an IP address.
+ <a href="#client">Clients</a> have either a permanent IP address or one that
+ is dynamically assigned to them each time they connect with the network. IP
+ addresses are written as four sets of numbers, like this: 204.171.64.2.</dd>
+
+<dt id="irc">IRC (Internet Relay Chat)</dt><dd>A protocol used to chat with
+ other people in real-time using an IRC <a href="#client">client</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="isp">ISP (Internet Service Provider)</dt><dd>A company/institution
+ that provides <a href="#internet">Internet</a> connections.</dd>
+
+<dt id="java">Java</dt><dd>A programming language developed by Sun
+ Microsystems. A single Java program can run on many different kinds of
+ computers, thus avoiding the need for programmers to create a separate
+ version of each program for each kind of computer. Your browser can
+ automatically download and run Java programs (also called applets).</dd>
+
+<dt id="javascript">JavaScript</dt><dd>A scripting language commonly used to
+ construct <a href="#web_page">web pages</a>. Programmers use JavaScript to
+ make web pages more interactive; for example, to display forms and buttons.
+ JavaScript can be used with <a href="#java">Java</a>, but is technically a
+ separate language. Java is not required for JavaScript to work
+ correctly.</dd>
+
+<dt id="key">key</dt><dd>A large number used by a
+ <a href="#cryptographic_algorithm">cryptographic algorithm</a> to encrypt or
+ decrypt data. A person&apos;s public key, for example, allows other people to
+ encrypt messages to that person. The encrypted messages must be decrypted
+ with the corresponding private key. See also
+ <a href="#public-key_cryptography">public-key cryptography</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="ldap">LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol)</dt><dd>A standard
+ protocol for accessing directory services, such as corporate address books,
+ across multiple platforms. You can set up your browser to access LDAP
+ directories from the Address Book. You can also set up Mail &amp; Newsgroups
+ to use an LDAP directory for email address autocompletion.</dd>
+
+<dt id="location_bar">Location Bar</dt><dd>The field (and associated buttons)
+ near the top of a browser window where you can type a
+ <a href="#url">URL</a> or search terms.</dd>
+
+<dt id="master_key">master key</dt><dd>A symmetric key used by
+ <a href="#certificate_manager">Certificate Manager</a> to encrypt
+ information. For example, <a href="#password_manager">Password Manager</a>
+ uses Certificate Manager and your master key to encrypt email passwords,
+ website passwords, and other stored sensitive information. See also
+ <a href="#symmetric_encryption">symmetric encryption</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="master_password">master password</dt><dd>A password used by
+ Certificate Manager to protect the master key and/or private keys stored on a
+ <a href="#security_device">security device</a>. Certificate Manager needs to
+ access your private keys, for example, when you sign email messages or use
+ one of your own certificates to identify yourself to a website. It needs to
+ access your master key when Password Manager or Form Manager reads or adds to
+ your personal information. You can set or change your master password from
+ the Master Passwords preferences panel. Each security device requires a
+ separate master password. See also <a href="#private_key">private key</a>,
+ <a href="#master_key">master key</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="misrepresentation">misrepresentation</dt><dd>Presentation of an entity
+ as a person or organization that it is not. For example, a website might
+ pretend to be a furniture store when it is really just a site that takes
+ credit card payments but never sends any goods. See also
+ <a href="#spoofing">spoofing</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="navigation_toolbar">Navigation Toolbar</dt><dd>The toolbar near the top
+ of the browser window that includes the Back and Forward buttons.</dd>
+
+<dt id="nonrepudiation">nonrepudiation</dt><dd>The inability, of the sender of
+ a message, to deny having sent the message. A regular hand-written signature
+ provides one form of nonrepudiation. A
+ <a href="#digital_signature">digital signature</a> provides another.</dd>
+
+<dt id="object_signing">object signing</dt><dd>A technology that allows
+ software developers to sign Java code, JavaScript scripts, or any kind of
+ file, and that allows users to identify the signers and control access by
+ signed code to local system resources.</dd>
+
+<dt id="object-signing_certificate">object-signing certificate</dt><dd>A
+ certificate whose corresponding private key is used to sign objects such as
+ code files. See also <a href="#object_signing">object signing</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="ocsp">OCSP (Online Certificate Status Protocol)</dt><dd>A set of rules
+ that <a href="#certificate_manager">Certificate Manager</a> follows to
+ perform an online check of a certificate&apos;s validity each time the
+ certificate is used. This process involves checking the certificate against a
+ list of valid certificates maintained at a specified website. Your computer
+ must be online for OCSP to work.</dd>
+
+<dt id="p3p">P3P (Platform for Privacy Preferences)</dt><dd>A standard
+ published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) designed to help users to
+ gain more control over the use of personal information by websites they
+ visit. For general information on the standard itself, see the online
+ document <a href="http://www.w3.org/P3P/">P3P Public Overview</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="password-based_authentication">password-based
+ authentication</dt><dd>Confident identification by means of a name and
+ password. See also <a href="#authentication">authentication</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="password_manager">Password Manager</dt><dd>The part of the
+ browser that can help you remember some or all of your names and passwords by
+ storing them on your computer&apos;s hard disk, and entering them for you
+ automatically when you visit such sites.</dd>
+
+<dt id="personal_toolbar">Personal Toolbar</dt><dd>The customizable toolbar
+ that appears just below the location bar by default in the browser. It
+ contains standard buttons such as Home, Bookmarks, and so on that you can add
+ or remove. You can also add buttons for your favorite bookmarks, or folders
+ containing groups of bookmarks.</dd>
+
+<dt id="phishing">Phishing</dt><dd>Phishing is a fraudulent business scheme in
+ which a party creates counterfeit websites, hijacking brand names of banks,
+ e-retailers and credit card companies, trying to collect victims&apos;
+ personal information.</dd>
+
+<dt id="pkcs_11">PKCS #11</dt><dd>The public-key cryptography standard that
+ governs security devices such as smart cards. See also
+ <a href="#security_device">security device</a>, <a href="#smart_card">smart
+ card</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="pkcs_11_module">PKCS #11 module</dt><dd>A program on your computer
+ that manages cryptographic services such as encryption and decryption using
+ the PKCS #11 standard. Also called <em>cryptographic modules</em>,
+ <em>cryptographic service providers</em>, or <em>security modules</em>,
+ PKCS #11 modules control either hardware or software devices. A PKCS #11
+ module always controls one or more slots, which may be implemented as some
+ form of physical reader (for example, for reading smart cards) or in
+ software. Each slot for a PKCS #11 module can in turn contain a
+ <a href="#security_device">security device</a> (also called <em>token</em>),
+ which is the hardware or software device that provides cryptographic services
+ and stores certificates and keys. <a href="#certificate_manager">Certificate
+ Manager</a> provides two built-in PKCS #11 modules. You may install
+ additional modules on your computer to control smart card readers or other
+ hardware devices.</dd>
+
+<dt id="pki">PKI (public-key infrastructure)</dt><dd>The standards and services
+ that facilitate the use of public-key cryptography and certificates in a
+ networked environment.</dd>
+
+<dt id="plugin">plugin</dt><dd>A type of
+ <a href="#helper_application">helper application</a> that adds new
+ capabilities to your browser, such as the ability to play audio or video
+ clips. Unlike other kinds of helper applications, a plugin application
+ installs itself into the Plugins directory within the main browser
+ installation directory and typically can be opened within the browser itself
+ (internally). For example, an audio plugin lets you listen to audio files on
+ a <a href="#web_page">web page</a> or in an email message. Macromedia Flash
+ Player and Java are both examples of plugin applications.</dd>
+
+<dt id="pop">POP (Post Office Protocol)</dt><dd>A standard mail server protocol
+ that requires you to download new messages to your local
+ computer&mdash;although you can choose to leave copies on the server. With
+ POP, you can store all your messages, including sent mail, drafts, and custom
+ folders, on one computer only. By contrast,
+ <a href="#imap">IMAP</a> allows you to permanently store all your messages
+ and any changes to them on the server, where you can access them from any
+ computer. Most <a href="#isp">ISPs</a> currently support POP.</dd>
+
+<dt id="private_key">private key</dt><dd>One of a pair of
+ <a href="#key">keys</a> used in public-key cryptography. The private key is
+ kept secret and is used to decrypt data that has been encrypted with the
+ corresponding public key.</dd>
+
+<dt id="proxy">proxy</dt><dd>An intermediary or <q>go-between</q> program that
+ acts as both a <a href="#server">server</a> and a
+ <a href="#client">client</a> for the purpose of making requests on behalf of
+ other clients.</dd>
+
+<dt id="public_key">public key</dt><dd>
+ One of a pair of <a href="#key">keys</a> used in public-key cryptography.
+ The public key is distributed freely and published as part of a
+ <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>. It is typically used to encrypt data
+ sent to the public key&apos;s owner, who then decrypts the data with the
+ corresponding private key.</dd>
+
+<dt id="public-key_cryptography">public-key cryptography</dt><dd>A set of
+ well-established techniques and standards that allow an entity (such as a
+ person, an organization, or hardware such as a router) to verify its identity
+ electronically or to sign and encrypt electronic data. Two keys are involved:
+ a <a href="#public_key">public key</a> and a <a href="#private_key">private
+ key</a>. The public key is published as part of a
+ <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>, which associates that key with a
+ particular identity. The corresponding private key is kept secret. Data
+ encrypted with the public key can be decrypted only with the private key.
+ </dd>
+
+<dt id="roaming_profile">roaming profile</dt><dd>A user profile (or parts of
+ it) stored on a remote <a href="#server">server</a> and used for sharing the
+ same settings and data across multiple computers.</dd>
+
+<dt id="root_ca">root CA</dt><dd>The
+ <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate authority (CA)</a> with a
+ self-signed certificate at the top of a
+ <a href="#certificate_chain">certificate chain</a>. See also
+ <a href="#subordinate_ca">subordinate CA</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="search_engine">search engine</dt><dd>A web-based program that allows
+ users to search for and retrieve specific information from the
+ <a href="#world_wide_web">World Wide Web (WWW)</a>. The search engine may
+ search the full text of web documents or a list of keywords, or use
+ librarians who review web documents and index them manually for retrieval.
+ Typically, the user types a word or phrase, also called a query, into a
+ search box, and the search engine displays links to relevant web pages.</dd>
+
+<dt id="security_certificate">security certificate</dt><dd>See
+ <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="security_device">security device</dt><dd>Hardware or software that
+ provides cryptographic services such as encryption and decryption and can
+ store certificates and keys. A <a href="#smart_card">smart card</a> is one
+ example of a security device implemented in hardware.
+ <a href="#certificate_manager">Certificate Manager</a> contains its own
+ built-in security device, called the
+ <a href="#software_security_device">software security device</a>, that is
+ always available while the browser is running. Each security device is
+ protected by its own <a href="#master_password">master password</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="security_module">security module</dt><dd>See
+ <a href="#pkcs_11_module">PKCS #11 module</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="security_token">security token</dt><dd>See
+ <a href="#security_device">security device</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="server">server</dt><dd>Software (such as software that serves up web
+ pages) that receives requests from and sends information to a
+ <a href="#client">client</a>, which is usually running on a different
+ computer. A computer on which server software runs is also described as a
+ server.</dd>
+
+<dt id="server_authentication">server authentication</dt><dd>The process of
+ identifying a <a href="#server">server</a> to a <a href="#client">client</a>
+ by using a <a href="#server_ssl_certificate">server SSL certificate</a>. See
+ also <a href="#client_authentication">client authentication</a>,
+ <a href="#ssl">SSL (Secure Sockets Layer)</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="server_ssl_certificate">server SSL certificate</dt><dd>A
+ certificate that a <a href="#server">server</a> presents to a
+ <a href="#client">client</a> to authenticate the server&apos;s identity using
+ the <a href="#ssl">SSL (Secure Sockets Layer)</a> protocol.</dd>
+
+<dt id="signing_certificate">signing certificate</dt><dd>A certificate whose
+ corresponding <a href="#private_key">private key</a> is used to sign
+ transmitted data, so that the receiver can verify the identity of the sender.
+ Certificate authorities (CAs) often issue a signing certificate that will be
+ used to sign email messages at the same time as an
+ <a href="#encryption_certificate">encryption certificate</a> that will be
+ used to encrypt email messages. See also <a href="#dual_key_pairs">dual key
+ pairs</a>, <a href="#digital_signature">digital signature</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="signing_key">signing key</dt><dd>A private key used for signing only.
+ A signing key and its equivalent public key, together with an
+ <a href="#encryption_key">encryption key</a> and its equivalent private key,
+ constitute <a href="#dual_key_pairs">dual key pairs</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="slot">slot</dt><dd>A piece of hardware, or its equivalent in software,
+ that is controlled by a <a href="#pkcs_11_module">PKCS #11 module</a> and
+ designed to contain a <a href="#security_device">security device</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="smart_card">smart card</dt><dd>A small device, typically about the size
+ of a credit card, that contains a microprocessor and is capable of storing
+ cryptographic information (such as keys and certificates) and performing
+ cryptographic operations. Smart cards use the <a href="#pkcs_11">PKCS #11</a>
+ standard. A smart card is one kind of <a href="#security_device">security
+ device</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="smtp">SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol)</dt><dd>A protocol that
+ sends email messages across the <a href="#internet">Internet</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="socks">SOCKS</dt><dd>A protocol that a <a href="#proxy">proxy</a>
+ server can use to accept requests from client users in an internal network
+ so that it can forward them across the <a href="#internet">Internet</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="software_security_device">software security device</dt><dd>The default
+ <a href="#security_device">security device</a> used by
+ <a href="#certificate_manager">Certificate Manager</a> to store private keys
+ associated with your certificates. In addition to private keys, the software
+ security device stores the master key used by
+ <a href="#password_manager">Password Manager</a> to encrypt email passwords,
+ website passwords, and other sensitive information. See also
+ <a href="#private_key">private key</a> and <a href="#master_password">master
+ key</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="spoofing">spoofing</dt><dd>Pretending to be someone else. For example,
+ a person can pretend to have the email address <tt>jdoe@mozilla.com</tt>, or
+ a computer can identify itself as a site called <tt>www.mozilla.com</tt> when
+ it is not. Spoofing is one form of
+ <a href="#misrepresentation">misrepresentation</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="ssl">SSL (Secure Sockets Layer)</dt><dd>A protocol that allows mutual
+ authentication between a <a href="#client">client</a> and a
+ <a href="#server">server</a> for the purpose of establishing an authenticated
+ and encrypted connection. SSL runs above <a href="#tcp_ip">TCP/IP</a> and
+ below <a href="#http">HTTP</a>, <a href="#ldap">LDAP</a>,
+ <a href="#imap">IMAP</a>, NNTP, and other high-level network protocols.
+ The new Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) standard called Transport
+ Layer Security (TLS) is based on SSL. See also
+ <a href="#authentication">authentication</a>,
+ <a href="#encryption">encryption</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="status_bar">Status Bar</dt><dd>The toolbar that appears at the bottom
+ of any &brandShortName; window. It includes the
+ <a href="#component_bar">Component Bar</a> on the left and status icons on
+ the right.</dd>
+
+<dt id="subject">subject</dt><dd>The entity (such as a person, organization,
+ or router) identified by a <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>. In
+ particular, the subject field of a certificate contains the certified
+ entity&apos;s <a href="#subject_name">subject name</a> and other
+ characteristics.</dd>
+
+<dt id="subject_name">subject name</dt><dd>A
+ <a href="#distinguished_name">distinguished name (DN)</a> that uniquely
+ describes the <a href="#subject">subject</a> of a
+ <a href="#certificate">certificate</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="subordinate_ca">subordinate CA</dt><dd>A
+ <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate authority (CA)</a> whose
+ certificate is signed by another subordinate CA or by the root CA. See also
+ <a href="#certificate_chain">certificate chain</a>, <a href="#root_ca">root
+ CA</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="symmetric_encryption">symmetric encryption</dt><dd>An encryption method
+ that uses a single cryptographic key to both encrypt and decrypt a given
+ message.</dd>
+
+<dt id="tamper_detection">tamper detection</dt><dd>A mechanism ensuring that
+ data received in electronic form has not been tampered with; that is, that
+ the data received corresponds entirely with the original version of the same
+ data.</dd>
+
+<dt id="tcp">TCP</dt><dd>See <a href="#tcp_ip">TCP/IP</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="tcp_ip">TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
+ Protocol)</dt><dd>A Unix protocol used to connect computers running a variety
+ of operating systems. TCP/IP is an essential Internet protocol and has become
+ a global standard.</dd>
+
+<dt id="third-party_cookie">third-party cookie</dt><dd>See
+ <a href="#foreign_cookie">foreign cookie</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="tls">TLS</dt><dd>See <a href="#ssl">SSL
+ (Secure Sockets Layer).</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="token">token</dt><dd>See <a href="#security_device">security
+ device</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="tooltip">tooltip</dt><dd>A small box with text that appears when
+ you hover your mouse's cursor over certain items. It usually contains
+ information regarding the item being hovered over.</dd>
+
+<dt id="trust">trust</dt><dd>Confident reliance on a person or other entity. In
+ the context of <a href="#pki">PKI (public-key infrastructure)</a>, trust
+ usually refers to the relationship between the user of a certificate and the
+ <a href="#certificate_authority">certificate authority (CA)</a> that issued
+ the certificate. If you use Certificate Manager to specify that you trust a
+ CA, Certificate Manager trusts valid certificates issued by that CA unless
+ you specify otherwise in the settings for individual certificates. You use
+ the Authorities tab in Certificate Manager to specify the kinds of
+ certificates you do or don&apos;t trust specific CAs to issue.</dd>
+
+<dt id="url">URL (Uniform Resource Locator)</dt><dd>The standardized address
+ that tells your browser how to locate a file or other resource on the Web.
+ For example: <tt>http://www.mozilla.org.</tt> You can type URLs into the
+ browser&apos;s <a href="#location_bar">Location Bar</a> to access
+ <a href="#web_page">web pages</a>. URLs are also used in the links on web
+ pages that you can click to go to other web pages. Also known as an Internet
+ address or Web address.</dd>
+
+<dt id="web_page">web page</dt><dd>A single document on the World Wide Web that
+ is specified by a unique address or <a href="#url">URL</a> and that may
+ contain text, hyperlinks, and graphics.</dd>
+
+<dt id="web_site">website</dt><dd>A group of related web pages linked by
+ hyperlinks and managed by a single company, organization, or individual. A
+ website may include text, graphics, audio and video files, and links to
+ other websites.</dd>
+
+<dt id="world_wide_web">World Wide Web (WWW)</dt><dd>Also known as the Web. A
+ portion of the <a href="#internet">Internet</a> that is made up of web pages
+ stored by web <a href="#server">servers</a> and displayed by
+ <a href="#client">clients</a> called web browsers (such as
+ &brandShortName;).</dd>
+
+<dt id="wpad">WPAD (Web Proxy AutoDiscovery)</dt><dd>A proposed Internet
+ protocol that allows a Web browser to automatically locate and interface
+ with <a href="#proxy">proxy</a> services in a network.</dd>
+
+<dt id="xml">XML (Extensible Markup Language)</dt><dd>An open standard for
+ describing data. Unlike <a href="#html">HTML</a>, XML allows the developer of
+ a web page to define special tags. For more information, see the online W3C
+ document
+ <a href="http://www.w3.org/XML/">Extensible Markup Language (XML)</a>.</dd>
+
+<dt id="xslt">XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformation)</dt><dd>A
+ language used to convert an XML document into another XML document or into
+ some other format.</dd>
+
+<dt id="xul">XUL (XML User Interface Language)</dt><dd>A XML markup language
+ for creating user interfaces in applications.</dd>
+
+</dl>
+
+<p>&copyright.string;</p>
+
+</body>
+</html>