Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

You probably don't need private PKI for internal infrastructure

Running your own certificate authority sounds like the responsible choice for internal infrastructure. Distribute your root cert to every machine and issue certs internally. In practice, you spend the next six months chasing down every device, contractor laptop, and vendor console that didn’t get root installed. The warnings come back. And when they do, people click through them, because they always have. There’s a simpler path, and most teams don’t know it exists.

Certificate Audit logs are live

Certificate automation does a lot of work on your behalf. Agents running on your servers, talking to certificate authorities, deploying certs to your infrastructure. At some point someone (your CISO, your auditor, or your own brain at 3am) is going to ask: what exactly happened, and when? Today we’re shipping audit logs. Every action taken in CertKit is now recorded: logins, invitations, certificates added, issued, renewed, revoked, and deployed. Agent registrations, approvals, and config changes.