Who benefits from this? Even though Let’s Encrypt stresses that most site operators will do fine sticking with ordinary domain certificates, there are still scenarios where a numeric identifier is the only practical choice:

Infrastructure services such as DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) – where clients may pin a literal IP address for performance or censorship-evasion reasons.
IoT and home-lab devices – think network-attached storage boxes, for example, living behind static WAN addresses.
Ephemeral cloud workloads – short-lived back-end servers that spin up with public IPs faster than DNS records can propagate.
  • jj4211@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    They will require the requester to prove they control the standard http(s) ports, which isn’t possible with any nat.

    It won’t work for such users, but also wouldn’t enable any sort of false claims over a shared IP.