Actually, providers generate public and the corresponding private
certificates to their users since it is the easiest way to sign a
certificate with an intermediate authority certificate and verify
their authenticity on their servers.
This is much more complicated if the user would provide his
self-generated public key only.
Marius, YO2LOJ
It was noted that some users would find key generation, etc. to be quite advanced/expert.
It's interesting that was noted.
A main reason I understood some commercial companies generate a private key for you - is so that they can offer you a complete Wireguard configuration file for setup purposes. They would be unable to do that via a public-key-only exchange/setup with the remote peer.
73,
- LynwoodKB3VWG
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