On 7/11/2016 9:42 AM, Peter TB Brett wrote: > If taken to court, I expect Apple would show evidence of the above and > argue that they are taking much-needed steps to ensure users' security > and safety, by making sure that the data the user receives is the same > as the data that was sent, and that sensitive data cannot be sent over > easily-intercepted links.
If taken to court, I'd expect Apple to just out spend anyone else. Sadly, in the US, money can buy you the verdict you want! And yes, you are completely right. My "1st amendment" comment has no grounds and was just venting frustration at Apple taking away consumer choice - although I suppose the consumer still has a choice to switch to Android (until Google does the same dumb thing). I know a lot of people who have tiny webs sites - for home businesses, for hobby interests, for their own blogs among friends, and on and on. There folks are never going to update these web sites to HTTPS. In most cases, some one else set up the web sites for them and is no longer available and they know nothing about managing them. Unfortunately, they will simply notice that fewer people visit their sites OR perhaps discover they can no longer see their site from their own iPhone and have no idea why - even after reading any error messages - and just shrug it off as "tech stuff not working again". Not giving users a choice between HTTP and HTTPS will reduce user access to content regardless of what possible benefits the security may bring. _______________________________________________ use-livecode mailing list use-livecode@lists.runrev.com Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode