Having a secure site offers plenty of benefits for SEO. Here are the top reasons why you should switch from HTTP to HTTPS. In 2018, Google started showing this to Chrome users if they clicked on a non ...
Chrome has already taken numerous measures to inform users if they're on an unencrypted HTTP website, but starting today it's going one step further, with version 68 of the browser displaying a ...
In early 2017, Chrome began prominently labeling certain insecure HTTP sites as “Not secure” in the address bar. Today, Google announced plans to mark all HTTP pages the same way on an upcoming ...
The increased adoption of HTTPS among website operators will soon lead to browsers marking HTTP pages as "Not Secure" by default. For example, the current Firefox Nightly Edition (version 59) includes ...
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 ...
Starting with Firefox 70, set to be released in October this year, Mozilla plans to show a permanent "not secure" indicator for all HTTP websites in Firefox. The decision was formally announced today ...
Starting in January 2017, Google’s web browser, Chrome, will treat any website encoded in HTTP as a non-secure site if it transmits credit card information or passwords, the tech company has revealed.
Since February, Google has planned to brand non-HTTPS sites as “Not Secure,” and today, with Chrome 68, that change is being rolled out to a wide audience. With the change, every site now gets a label ...
Judgement Day has arrived for site operators that haven't fully switched over to HTTPS. Google Chrome, the world's most popular web browser, has been updated to version 68. And with that upgrade, ...
Corbin is a tech journalist and developer who worked at Android Police from 2016 until 2021. Check out his other work at corbin.io. For years, HTTPS was regarded as only necessary for sites handling ...
Starting in July, Google Chrome will mark all HTTP sites as “not secure,” according to a blog post published today by Chrome security product manager Emily Schechter. Chrome currently displays a ...
Google announced earlier today plans to mark all HTTP sites as "Not Secure" in Chrome, starting with July 2018, when the company plans to release Google Chrome 68. The company's decision comes after ...