Websites still serve their pages via vulnerable redirects. Google has now set a deadline to disallow that happening ...
Google is finally moving forward with its plan to discourage the use of HTTP sites by marking them as non-secure on Chrome. The new warning will be rolled out very gradually: Beginning in January, ...
Google first announced the secure connections option for Chrome in 2021, which users could opt into to see a warning before ...
The transition to the more-secure HTTPS web protocol has plateaued, according to Google. As of 2020, 95 to 99 percent of navigations in Chrome use HTTPS. To help make it safer for users to click on ...
With today's release of Chrome 68 for desktops, the browser has started flagging all unencrypted HTTP sites as "not secure." Meanwhile, security researcher Troy Hunt has launched a site that lists the ...
Mozilla is planning to gradually favor HTTPS (HTTP Secure) connections over non-secure HTTP connections by making some new features on its Firefox browser available only to secured sites. The browser ...
Google is giving web developers six months to prepare for the next phase of its plan to mark all HTTP pages as 'Not secure'. October will mark stage two of Google's plan to label all HTTP pages as ...
Starting with Chrome 62, Google will start marking any HTTP page where users may enter data, and any HTTP page visited in incognito mode Google began in January flashing warnings in the Chrome address ...
Over the past couple of years, there has been a major move to make the web more secure. The chief advancement to improve security is the move to HTTP Secure. In recent times, most browser vendors ...
The Web can be a pretty scary place. The power and information it gives users is also available to those with less benign intentions. Browser makers have long been trying to make the Web safer, only ...
Any Chrome user visiting an HTTP website will see an easily noticeable warning label that the site is “not secure.” Websites that insist on sticking with HTTP will have a public relations issue on ...
As more and more websites offer access over encrypted HTTPS, Chrome will soon brand any site served up over plain, unencrypted HTTP as "Not secure." Chrome 68, due for release in July, will start ...