Fix for bug 5329. Added browserrootcertificates to package_definition.xml file. Also correcte the wrong spelling.
/**
@page Security_intro_certificates Certificates
A @ref certificate binds a public key to a certain individual/entity. This is usually done using @ref digital_signature "digital signatures": if a
@ref certificate bearing a public key and an individual's name is signed with a key pair which you already trust, then you can
rest assure that the public key in the @ref certificate really does belong to the individual named in the @ref certificate.
Different standards using public key cryptography employ different models for using certificates to establish trust.
Such a model, encompassing data structures, rules for their use, and users of them, may be referred to as a
@ref PKI "Public Key Infrastructure" (PKI). @ref SSL, @ref TLS and @ref SMIME "S/MIME" all use @ref X509 "X.509" v.3 certificates, and a
hierarchical @ref PKI in which users are certified by @ref CA "Certification Authorities" (CAs).
All data which appear in the interface between the Symbian OS and the rest of the world need a transport encoding, and it
is in this form that they are sent and received. The transport encoding for @ref X509 "X.509" data structures is @ref DER encoded
@ref ASN "ASN.1".
@section certification_authorities Certification Authorities
@ref CA "Certification Authorities" (CAs) are trusted third parties which perform the following functions in the @ref PKIX public
key infrastructure:
@li provide trusted 'root' certificates to users (@ref EE "End Entities"), by supplying them with the @ref CA's public key
@li certifying End Entities: checking that they are who they say they are, and generating certificates for them. The
certified End Entity is the \b subject of the @ref certificate: the @ref CA is the \b issuer
@li supporting @ref certificate revocation and revocation checking: if an End Entity suspects that their key has been
compromised, they contact the Certification Authority which issued it. @ref CA "CA"s publish lists of revoked certificates
(known as @ref CRL "Certificate Revocation Lists") at regular intervals, which End Entities can use to check that
certificates sent to them have not been revoked
@li publishing certificates: the most likely place for this is an LDAP directory, since @ref X509_certificate "X.509 certificates" identify
their subjects and issuers by describing a path through an X.500 directory
*/