No. It's easy to currently register an SSL certificate for any domain, even if that domain is similar to the name of another. The main reason this was a "deterrent" to phishers is that generating tons of these was expensive.
The phishers still have to front the cost for the domain itself, so this really isn't going to increase the number of phishing domains. It may increase the number of phishing domains with SSL, but the purpose of Lets Encrypt is to encrypt everything -- not just "official domains"
No you are wrong. Perhaps it's not the case everywhere. But like I said, from personal experience I know that certain types of domains are checked. I tried and failed to register a certificate for a phising domain that masqueraded as a banking website.
whether or not this was originaly the point of ssl or not, this is how many non-technical people decide to trust a page or not: by looking at the lock in their browser.
> No you are wrong. Perhaps it's not the case everywhere. But like I said, from personal experience I know that certain types of domains are checked. I tried and failed to register a certificate for a phising domain that masqueraded as a banking website.
I never said it's the case everywhere. I said it's easy to register an SSL certificate for basically any domain you actually own, which is true. Basic SSL certificates are not designed to provide extended validation (there is EV certificates for that), they are designed to identify that domain.
The phishers still have to front the cost for the domain itself, so this really isn't going to increase the number of phishing domains. It may increase the number of phishing domains with SSL, but the purpose of Lets Encrypt is to encrypt everything -- not just "official domains"