We issued our billionth certificate on February 27, 2020. We’re going to use this big round number as an opportunity to reflect on what has changed for us, and for the Internet, leading up to this event. In particular, we want to talk about what has happened since the last time we talked about a big round number of certificates -one hundred million. . One thing that’s different now is that the Web is much more encrypted than it was. In June of 2017 approximately 58% of page loads used HTTPS globally, 64% in the United States. Today 81% of page loads use HTTPS globally, and we’re at 91% in the United States! This is an incredible achievement. That’s a lot more privacy and security for everybody. Another thing that’s different is that our organization has grown a bit, but not by much! In June of 2017 we were serving approximately 46M websites, and we did so with 11 full time staff and an annual budget of $2.61M. Today we serve nearly 192M websites with 13 full time staff and an annual budget of approximately $3.35M. This means we’re serving more than 4x the websites with only two additional staff and a 28% increase in budget. The additional staff and budget did more than just improve our ability to scale though - we’ve made improvements across the board to provide even more secure and reliable service. The link for this article located at Let's Encrypt is no longer available. . The use of encryption on the web has seen remarkable growth, with the proportion of HTTPS pages rising from 58% in 2017 to 81% around the world as of now.. Lets Encrypt Certificates, HTTPS Adoption, Web Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A project dear to its heart, Let's Encrypt has now made wildcard certificate support live in the next step to encrypt the Web. The certificate authority, which offers free SSL and TLS certificates to webmasters, said this week that support is now live for wildcard certificates, alongside ACMEv2. . First announced back in 2017, Let's Encrypt "wildcard" certificates are free certificates for HTTPS deployment. The wildcards act in the same way as traditional TLS certificates but can be used to secure a domain and unlimited sub-domains on a single certificate, making deployment quicker. . First announced back in 2017, Let's Encrypt 'wildcard' certificates are free certificates for HTTPS . project, heart, let's, encrypt, wildcard, certificate, support. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Mozilla Foundation is initiating the process to phase out insecure HTTP connections in the Firefox browser. The decision is part of a broader movement to encrypt the Web, which in the case of Mozilla Firefox, means permitting only encrypted HTTPS browser connections.. Mozilla is the developer of Firefox. It accounts for between 12 and 22 percent of the browser market share throughout its various versions. The group has not yet established a timeline for the deprecation of HTTP. The link for this article located at ThreatPost is no longer available. . Mozilla is advancing Firefox with a focus on complete HTTPS adoption to enhance web safety and eliminate outdated HTTP links.. Mozilla Foundation, HTTPS Enforcement, Firefox Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Web is an insecure place and getting more insecure all the time. The latest threat, the Firesheep add-in for Firefox, is particularly dangerous because it is exceedingly simple to use. Someone with absolutely no hacking experience can grab your private login information to sites such as Facebook and Amazon, and then log in as you and do anything they want, as if they were you.. The free Firefox add-in HTTPS Everywhere helps protect against that threat and other privacy invaders by effectively encrypting information when you visit certain Web sites. A collaboration between the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Tor Project (which employs a network and free software to help protect people's privacy), HTTPS Everywhere ensures that when you visit certain sites, all of your communications are encrypted and secure. The link for this article located at IT World is no longer available. . The free Firefox add-in HTTPS Everywhere helps protect against that threat and other privacy invader. insecure, place, getting, latest, threat, fireshee. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Linux Security had the chance to talk with Eddy Nigg, founder of StartSSL, an . Linux Security: So, first of all: on your site you have a strong statement, basically against The link for this article located at LinuxSecurity IT is no longer available. . In our special interview, Eddy Nigg elaborates on StartSSL’s distinctive strategy regarding online security and the issuance of SSL certificates.. StartSSL, Web Encryption, Secure Connections, SSL Certificates, Online Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Ah, cryptographic security: a boon to those who understand the algorithms, but all too often a lost cause to those who don't. The secure HTTPS protocol for Web surfing is widely accepted, but has one fatal flaw: users ignore certificate error warnings. A Firefox extension called Perspectives aims to close that security hole. What do you think about the Firefox extension called Perpsectives? I find it to report to many fail negatives. . The link for this article located at Linux.com is no longer available. . Explore the Perspectives extension, enhancing HTTPS security by managing certificate issues and verifying SSL/TLS authenticity through trusted observers for improved web integrity. browser extension, https security, web encryption, secure browsing. . Bill Locke
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.