Mission accomplished? HTTPS security after DigiNotar
Guest Post: What are the most widely used HTTPS security extensions and how are they improving HTTPS security for users?
Guest Post: What are the most widely used HTTPS security extensions and how are they improving HTTPS security for users?
A more detailed look at the efforts to hide the DNS behind HTTPS.
Guest Post: RFC8188 provides protocol designers a new option for building multi-party protocols with HTTPS by defining a standardized format for encrypting HTTP message bodies.
Guest Post: New research by NZRS provides more insight into how New Zealand’s .nz domains are secured.
Guest Post: Given how critical DNS is to the Internet, it’s a mystery that much of the world is not prepared to implement DNSSEC.
Guest Post: In the third and final part of this series I will share with you some of the challenges of HTTPS.
Guest Post: In the second part of this series we look at why HTTPS has become so popular among users and web domain owners.
Guest Post: Learn what HTTPS is, where it came from, and how you can implement it in the first of this three-part series.
Let’s Encrypt launched its Public Beta service recently where you can get a certificate for your domains, for free. Here are some simple instruction on how to use it.
Guest Post: Mohamad Dikshie Fauzie, researcher at Keio University Graduate School of Media and Governance reviews The Cost of The “S” in HTTPS