Comment by ziddoap
1 day ago
At one point in time, the entirety of web communication was completely unencrypted.
Why were people not mad then? Do you think people would be angrier now, if HTTPS were suddenly outlawed?
Among other valid answers, removing rights and privileges generally makes people angrier than not having those rights or privileges in the first place.
> Why were people not mad then?
Oh, we were. I am in the crowd who had been asking for generally used encryption since 1995. After all, we were already using SSH for our shell connections.
The first introduction to SSL outside of internet banking and Amazon was for many online services to use encryption only for their login (and user preferences) page. The session token was then happily sent in the clear for all subsequent page loads.
It took a while for always-on encryption to take hold, and many of the online services complained that enabling SSL for all their page loads was too expensive. Both computationally and in required hardware resources. When I wrote for an ICT magazine, I once did some easy benchmarking around the impact of public key size for connection handshakes. Back then a single 1024-bit RSA key encryption operation took 2ms. Doubling it to 2048 bits bumped that up to 8ms. (GMP operations have O(n^2) complexity in terms of keysize.)
"We" is an special group. I am technical but never thought much about it back then. There is a boiling frog. The 90s internet was used for searching and silly emails. Now it has you life in the cloud. But that didn't happen in a day.
Counterpoint: when web communication was unencrypted it was before we did our banking, tax filing, sent medical records, and sent all other kinds of sensitive information over the internet. The risks today are not remotely the same as they once were.
always used my own encryption and cyphered any sensitive data/communications, but the problem is that most people won't and you're often compromised by them
simple solutions like Whatsapp, Signal and ADP brought this to the masses - which some governments have issues about - and this makes a massive difference to everybody including those who wouldn't be caught dead using an iphone anyway
if we could go back to the early 1990s when only professionals, Uni students, techies and enthusiasts used the internet I'd go in a heartbeat but that's not the world we're living in