NEWS
Apple's Safari Tests 'Not Secure' Warning for Unencrypted Websites
2235
2018-11-15
Posted by 3uTools

Apple's Safari team, following Chrome's lead, has begun warning people when they're visiting websites that aren't protected by HTTPS encryption.


The feature, for now, is only in Safari Technology Preview 70, a version of the web browser Apple uses to test technology it typically brings to the ordinary version of Safari. Apple released the update Wednesday.


Apple's Safari Tests 'Not Secure' Warning for Unencrypted Websites


Apple is trying hard to improve privacy right now, an effort that could dispel apathy about the issue and help Apple stand out from tech rivals. It's also meant Apple has butted heads with law enforcement officials and politicians who want to preserve something like the ability to tap phone lines.


But when it comes to pushing website operators to secure connections, it's been players like Google, Mozilla and Cloudflare that took the initiative. In July, Chrome began warning you if you visited a site that wasn't secure, part of a longer-term plan to get us to consider secure connections to be the norm on the web. Mozilla helped launch the Let's Encrypt project that means website operators now can get the necessary encryption certificates for free.


Securing connections between websites and web browsers scrambles data to block potential eavesdroppers like hackers, governments, internet service providers or airport Wi-Fi operators. When Tim Berners-Lee founded the web 29 years ago, he created a technology called HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) to handle that communication, but use of the encrypted alternative, HTTPS, is spreading.


HTTPS also stops middlemen from tampering with web pages, for example, internet service providers showing their own ads or government attackers inserting software that turns people's computers into part of an attack on an opposition website.


Apple didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on its plans for bringing the warning to mainstream Safari. Apple's browser does warn you already if you have an insecure connection to a very sensitive website for typing in passwords or credit card numbers.


Source: cnet 

Related Articles
Apple Removes iCloud Activation Lock Status Tool From Website macOS High Sierra 10.13.2 Beta 4 Now Available Alibaba Pandora Lab Jailbreaks iOS 11.2 Successfully Apple Releases macOS Catalina With Find My, Screen Time, and No More iTunes Rumor: Apple Blocks Activation on iOS 9.0-9.3.5 Firmware Apple Still Signing iOS 11.3 Beta 5/6, Downgrade to It to Jailbreak Your iPhone iCloud Bypass Bug Discovered in iOS 11 iOS 10.3 Jailbreak / iOS 10.3.1 Jailbreak