What is HTTPS and why is it so important?
HTTPS is actually just HTTP but over a secure connection and what HTTPS actually gives us is identity encryption and integrity. So what that means is if you type HTTP google.com into a web browser, you can be sure that you’re talking to the real google.com, not some fake google.com also means that no attacker on the network can actually see or modify any of the traffic.
And this is actually really important because the collection of sites that you’re browsing actually says a lot about your intentions, your behavior, and your identity, and the web isn’t really continuing to get even more powerful, as chrome tends to add new features to the web platform.
For example, the web now has the geolocation API which means that sites can see where I live, where I work, maybe where my doctor is, or my kids go to school, and we really only want that information to be private between myself and the site that I trust so HTTP gives us these guarantees, and this is why we think it’s really important for the whole web to be HTTPS by default, so it’s been around for a while and it has kind of accumulated some misunderstandings around it.
Can you kind of help dispel some of the myths around it, so HTTPS has actually been around for quite a long time, but for many years it actually was very expensive and very slow and really hands-on and confusing to set up HTTPS.
But the reality is that people all over the web have worked hard to make that change and it’s become a lot cheaper and a lot easier to set up.
Https people still now think you know some of these myths about how it used to be are still true, but the reality is that has changed.
So, for example, it should be really expensive to set up HTTPS because you had to buy a certificate from what’s called a certificate authority, but now their certificate authorities out there that will give you a free certificate and make it really automatic and easy to set up.
One of the examples is let’s encrypt, so this is actually changed HTTPS and made it much easier to adopt. So what is the state of HTTPS? Now I look at HTTP archive data and it says that adoption is around like sixty percent and when you go back and look through like seven years of data, you can see it’s actually rising pretty steeply.
So what are the tools that you use to understand? The state of HTTPS and what is it so Chrome has a public transparency report where we published out about what we’re seeing in chrome in terms of the amount of HTTPS usage, that’s out there on the web.
So for example, what we’re seeing is the usage in Chrome on all of the different chrome platforms on desktop and on mobile is been rising over the years and if you go on to the HTTP transparency report, you can see chrome platform how the usage is increasing.
You can also see not only this in terms of the pages that are loaded over HTTPS, but also browsing time because as you might imagine, people are spending different amounts of time on different sites, and we can see that that across the different chrome platform is growing.
As well, it’s also broken down by country, which is pretty interesting, because you can see how different countries all over the world are doing on their adoption of HTTPS. Some other things that are on the transparency report are HTTPS adoption actually at Google. So you can see you know, Google, it is a big site, just like any other site.
It took us a long time to actually get this ramped up, and so it’s pretty cool that the transparency report also shows how HTTPS usage has grown at Google. For all of our different products, so what kinds of things are chrome doing to increase HTTPS adoption? So I would say there are two main areas where the chrome has made slow changes over time to encourage HTTPS adoption and the first is in Chrome’s UI for connection security.
So chrome shows an icon in the address bar that indicates connection security and we’ve actually changed this icon over time to help users understand the lack of security in HTTP connections.
So chrome used to show just this plain circled, I icon for HTTP connections and we thought that was actually a problem because it really doesn’t indicate to people at all that there’s no security with an HTTP connection and what we’d actually like to get to for all.
HTTP connections are this kind of scary: read not secure warning, but we think that if we just roll that out for all HTTP sites right away, it actually could cause some panic right because we don’t want the web to seem scary.
We don’t want people to see this morning all the time and we’ve also seen that people get what’s called warning fatigue, which is that if they see warnings too many times over and over, they start to ignore them. They stop paying attention to them. So we want to be honest with users without sort of inciting chaos and panic.
So what we’ve done is we’ve actually rolled out the warning slowly over time increases, so we first started showing this gray eye not secured in the address bar just for HTTP pages with passwords or credit cards, and then, sometime later, we started showing the warning also when Users enter data or for incognito pages, and we actually just announced that in July of this year, we’re going to start showing it on all HTTP pages.
So we’ve actually rolled that out over time we’ve seen the amount of HTTPS usage increase and because the HTTP unit has increased, then we’re not too scared about the warning fatigue that would be shown from the warning, and so what about the technical API is on the web.
Right so another thing that we’ve done in chrome, to encourage HTTPS adoption and also to you know make the web more secure is to require HTTPS for web API’s that are very powerful so for new API’s that have come out like service workers because service-worker is such a powerful API we’ve actually required HTTPS to use it.
This also goes for HTTP two, which really improves performance, and it actually requires HTTPS, but we’ve also taken a look at API. Is that already exists on the web and we’ve actually deprecated usage over? Not secure connections for the API’s that are very powerful, so an example here is geolocation, there’s also got user media, which is about getting the photos on your phone, and so now sites can no longer use those overages. This is like patching holes and security on exactly that’s great.
So where do you think we’re heading with HTTP? Are we going to achieve a hundred percent adoption and we can all go home or is our job not yet done? As we talked about earlier, adoption is still, you know not at a hundred percent, yet there. So we still definitely have you know a ways to go.
I don’t know that we’re going to get to a hundred percent because I think there’s always some kind of driftwood sites on the web things that people don’t maintain, but I do. I would like to see us get close, so you know, if you know any sites out there that are still HTTP, you should go, tell them to turn on HTTPS. They said no then tell them to come to talk to me and tell them why they should, and you know users on the web can also vote with their feet if, like their bank, isn’t secure like go, find a secure banking website put your money somewhere else.
So what are some of the knots that websites need to untangle when they need to make that switch from HTTP to HTTPS? So you know migrating your website to HTTPS. It’s not as easy as just you know, putting an S on the end of the name of the website. It’s not as easy as just getting a security certificate.
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