Chrome now says all HTTP sites are “not secure” but is it a good thing?
All HTTP sites are now treated as "not secure" by Chrome but while it's good for user security, will it harm freedom to experiment on the web?
All HTTP sites are now treated as "not secure" by Chrome but while it's good for user security, will it harm freedom to experiment on the web?
A McAfee tool for managing antivirus in the enterprise can be hacked by anyone on the web.
With SSL, mobiles and cloud applications complicating traditional defences, shunting all traffic to the cloud has helped one CISO sleep at night
David Braue | 15 Sep | Read more
Apple’s major iOS 10 update is rolling out across the globe today, and on top of a long list of new features it also brings a handful of important security fixes.
From January, Google’s Chrome browser will start telling its one billion users that pages on an unencrypted HTTP connection are not secure.
Security researchers have expanded and improved the three-year-old BREACH attack that exploits the HTTP compression mechanism in order to recover sensitive information such as authentication cookies from encrypted Web traffic.
Lucian Constantin | 05 Apr | Read more
Google and others have called for all websites encrypt traffic to and from browsers, but the task for publishers is a tricky one, largely because of online advertising.
Attacks on HTTP have outnumbered attacks on servers via the Microsoft SMB protocol for the first time since 2008, according to research from content distribution network (CDN) Akamai Technologies that also found Indonesia has ended China's long-standing reign as the world's most prolific producer of attack traffic.
David Braue | 17 Oct | Read more
Microsoft on Tuesday began offering users the option to secure their Hotmail sessions with HTTPS data encryption.
Nancy Gohring | 10 Nov | Read more