Users of Google Chrome should soon be able to get online more safely than ever before following the announcement of a major security upgrade to the browser. With Mozilla having already announced that ...
Google will begin marking HTTP pages where users can enter data as “not secure” in its Google Chrome browser come October. The change will appear in the release of Chrome 62, and will expand on the ...
This protocol is so ubiquitous these days, that upwards of 95 percent of websites have it in place as of 2020, and now in efforts to ensure that the clocks that users click on are equally secure, ...
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 ...