On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 7:56 PM, Adam Roach <a...@mozilla.com> wrote: > The whole line of argumentation that web browsers and servers should be > taking advantage of opportunistic encryption is explicitly informed by > what's actually "happening elsewhere." Because what's *actually* happening > is an overly-broad dragnet of personal information by a wide variety of both > private and governmental agencies -- activities that would be prohibitively > expensive in the face of opportunistic encryption.
ISPs are doing it already it turns out. Governments getting to ISPs has already happened. I think continuing to support opportunistic encryption in Firefox and the IETF is harmful to our mission. > Google's laser focus on preventing active attackers to the exclusion of any > solution that thwarts passive attacks is a prime example of insisting on a > perfect solution, resulting instead in substantial deployments of nothing. > They're naïvely hoping that finding just the right carrot will somehow > result in mass adoption of an approach that people have demonstrated, with > fourteen years of experience, significant reluctance to deploy universally. Where are you getting your data from? https://plus.google.com/+IlyaGrigorik/posts/7VSuQ66qA3C shows a very different view of what's happening. -- https://annevankesteren.nl/ _______________________________________________ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform