The Controller of Certifying Authorities issues licences and regulates the working of Certifying Authorities, who issue digital certificates for electronic authentication of users.
Digital certificate is like an electronic passport that allows a person, computer or organisation to securely exchange information over the Internet.
When contacted, Department of Electronics and Information Technology Secretary R S Sharma told PTI: "We are looking into this issue. Certifying Authority (CA) is taking appropriate steps and is working under the guidance of the CCA."
"The certificates were issued by NIC of India, which holds several intermediate CA certificates trusted by the Indian Controller of Certifying Authorities (India CCA)."
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Similarly, Microsoft said it is aware of improperly issued SSL certificates that could be used in attempts to spoof content, perform phishing attacks or perform man-in-the-middle attacks.
"SSL certificates were improperly issued by NIC, which operates subordinate CAs under root CAs operated by Government of India's Controller of Certifying Authorities, which are CAs present in the Trusted Root Certification Authorities Store," it added.
Google said it had alerted NIC, India CCA and Microsoft about the incident and blocked the mis-issued certificates in Chrome with a CRLSet push. "On July 3, India CCA informed us that they revoked all the NIC intermediate certificates and another CRLSet push was performed to include that revocation."
The US-based firm said India CCA informed it about the results of their investigation on July 8.
Digital certificate provides identifying information, and is forgery resistant and can be verified.
It contains certificate holder's name, a serial number, expiration dates, a copy of certificate holder's public key (used for encrypting messages and digital signatures) and digital signature of the CA so that a recipient can verify the certificate.