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512 points gslin | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.2s | source
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pests ◴[] No.42191619[source]
It feels like just yesterday I was paying for certs, or worst, just running without.

Can't believe its been ten years.

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ozim ◴[] No.42191666[source]
Can’t believe there are still anti TLS weirdos.
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dijit ◴[] No.42191688[source]
The digital equivalent of a local kebab shop menu does not need encryption.

The lack of understanding from us as technologists for people who would have had a working site and are now forced into either: an oligopoly of site hosting companies, or, for their site to break consistently as TLS standards rotate is one thing that brings me shame about our community.

You can come up with all kinds of reasons to gatekeep website hosting, “they have to update anyway” even when updating means reinstallion of an OS, “its not that hard to rotate” say people with deep knowledge of computers, “just get someone else to do it” say people who have a financial interest in it being that way.

Framing people with legitimate issues as weirdo’s is not as charming as you think it is.

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johannes1234321 ◴[] No.42191752[source]
TLS doesn't just hide the information transmitted, but also ensures the integrity. Thus nobody on the network tinkered with the prices on the menu.

Also the Kebap Shop probably has a form for reservation or ordering, which takes personal information.

True, they are all low risk things, but getting TLS is trivial (since many Webservers etc can do letsencrypt rotation fully automatically) and secure defaults are a good thing.

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account42 ◴[] No.42192727[source]
The Kebab Shop also takes orders over the phone, which is not any more encrypted.

And prices are more likely to be simply outdated than modified by a malicious entity. Your concerns are not based in reality.

replies(1): >>42193759 #
1. philistine ◴[] No.42193759[source]
The fact that content on http websites hasn’t been maliciously switched does not mean that https didn’t work.

It’s like a vaccine. We vaccinated most of the web against a very bad problem, and that has stopped the problem from happening in the first place. If 90% were still on http, way more ISPs would insert ads.