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In 1995, the Internet Engineering Task Force in conjunction with the National Institute of Standards and Technology[43] formed the Public-Key Infrastructure ([[X.509]]) working group. The working group, concluded in June 2014,[44] is commonly referred to as "PKIX." It produced RFCs and other standards documentation on using deploying X.509 in practice. In particular it produced RFC 3280 and its successor RFC 5280, which define how to use X.509 in Internet protocols.
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In 1995, the Internet Engineering Task Force in conjunction with the National Institute of Standards and Technology[43] formed the Public-Key Infrastructure (X.509) working group. The working group, concluded in June 2014,[44] is commonly referred to as "PKIX." It produced RFCs and other standards documentation on using deploying X.509 in practice. In particular it produced RFC 3280 and its successor RFC 5280, which define how to use X.509 in Internet protocols.
  
  

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