![]() ![]() That's why Google, Mozilla and other tech industry allies have been pushing websites everywhere to switch to the secure version, called HTTPS. ![]() HTTP has had a good run, but it has a problem: It doesn't protect communications with encryption that blocks eavesdropping and tampering. The Hypertext Transfer Protocol lets your web browser fetch a web page from the server that hosts it. HTTP, one of the technologies that's made the World Wide Web work since Tim Berners-Lee invented the web more than 25 years ago, just got a big black mark by its name, thanks to Google's Chrome web browser. ![]() Update, July 24: Google has released Chrome 68, adding the HTTPS "not secure" warning. ![]()
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