Chrome users have encountered "Not Safe" warnings from Tuesday



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  Google Chrome users have encountered warnings

If you are still using a Web site that uses the HTTP unsafe protocol, it is probably too late.

Visitors will be greeted with a message that tells them that they can not trust your website to be safe.

This is the message they will receive from Google Chrome which, in version 68 released Tuesday, July 23, 2018 – changes its behavior, and will begin to tag all sites that continue to use HTTP unencrypted unsecured.

And since Chrome is the most used browser in the world, it's hugely visitors who might feel disrupted visiting your website from Tuesday.

Why did Google make this change? Well,

It's not as if website administrators have not been warned fairly. The Chrome browser marked HTTP web pages that require unsecured passwords or credit card details since the beginning of last year.

And in February, Google confirmed that with Google Chrome 68 "Mark all sites HTTP as" unsecured "."

HTTPS is good for visitors to your website, and it is good for your website.

Activation HTTPS prevents hacking of your web pages and prevents anyone from snooping through the data your users send to your website. And, if you need more persuasion, Google said that if your website has HTTPS this will also help your search rankings.

And HTTPS does not have to cost you anything. The LetsEncrypt initiative allows anyone who owns a domain name to get a free certificate of trust. If LetsEncrypt is too old-fashioned for you, you could use Cloudflare's free plan to get the very important HTTPS in your URL .

Security Expert Troy Hunt has created a simple website titled (appropriately) httpsiseasy.com that can guide you through the process of setting up with Cloudflare.

There will be website owners who are going to be very angry that Chrome tells their users that their websites are not secure. They can even be regular Internet users who are also upset.

But it's a milestone in the process of making the Internet safer and safer. In the future, encryption should be the default, not the exception.

About the author, Graham Cluley

Graham Cluley is a veteran of the antivirus industry having worked for a number of security companies since the early 1990s. first version of Dr Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit for Windows. Now an independent security analyst, he regularly makes media appearances and is an international speaker on the topic of computer security, hackers and online privacy.

Follow him on Twitter at @gcluley or drop him an email.