2016 might be the year that HTTP finally dies. Chrome’s security team announced today that the browser will start marking websites that use insecure HTTP connections to transmit passwords and credit ...
To push more websites to implement encryption and to better protect users, Google will start flagging plain HTTP connections as insecure in its popular Chrome browser. The plan will go into effect in ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Google sends a nudge toward the unencrypted web Google sends a nudge toward the unencrypted web Starting in July, ...
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 ...
Two Chrome extensions in the Web Store named 'Phantom Shuttle' are posing as plugins for a proxy service to hijack user ...
As HTTPS has become more common across the web, Google Chrome is preparing to launch a security option that will block “insecure” downloads through HTTP. While it used to be the case that only privacy ...
Much of the web has switched to secure links—that is, when you type in a site like pcworld.com, it serves its pages over an https (“hypertext transfer protocol secure”) connection rather than over non ...
Google today launched Chrome 81 for Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, and iOS. Chrome 81 includes an Origin Trial of Web NFC for mobile, early Augmented Reality support, mixed images autoupgraded to HTTPS ...
If you can’t open the Chrome Web Store or if it is not working correctly, this post will help you resolve the issue. However, some users have reported that the Chrome Web Store is not opening in their ...
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