Certificates in authentik are used for the following use cases:
- Signing and verifying SAML Requests and Responses
- Signing JSON Web Tokens for OAuth and OIDC
- Connecting to remote docker hosts using the Docker integration
- Verifying LDAP Servers' certificates
- Encrypting outposts's endpoints
## Default certificate
Every authentik install generates a self-signed certificate on the first start. The certificate is called *authentik Self-signed Certificate* and is valid for 1 year.
This certificate is generated to be used as a default for all OAuth2/OIDC providers, as these don't require the certificate to be configured on both sides (the signature of a JWT is validated using the [JWKS](https://auth0.com/docs/security/tokens/json-web-tokens/json-web-key-sets) URL).
This certificate can also be used for SAML Providers/Sources, just keep in mind that the certificate is only valid for a year. Some SAML applications require the certificate to be valid, so they might need to be rotated regularly.