On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 1:55 AM, Henri Sivonen <hsivo...@hsivonen.fi> wrote:
> tion to https > that obtaining, provisioning and replacing certificates is too > expensive. > Related concepts are at the core of why I'm going to give Opportunistic Security a try with http/2. The issues you cite are real issues in practice, but they become magnified in other environments where the PKI doesn't apply well (e.g. behind firewalls, in embedded devices, etc..).. and then, perhaps most convincingly for me, there remains a lot of legacy web content that can't easily migrate to vanilla https:// schemes we all want them to run (e.g. third party dependencies or SNI dependencies) and this is a compatibility measure for them. Personally I expect any failure mode here will be that nobody uses it, not that it drives out https. But establishment is all transparent to the web security model and asynchronous, so if that does happen we can easily remove support. The potential upside is that a lot of http:// traffic will be encrypted and protected against passive monitoring. _______________________________________________ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform