Right. Also, when it comes to the other aspects of TLS, such as preventing middlemen from making sense of what information flows between you and the server, what exactly is the threat in this case? I mean, it's a public blog post, which you only ask to read and so you are served.
It's not about threat, it's about privacy. I understand your statements but 'what is the threat in this case' to answer that: I don't want to know, I've moved on from those worries. Always encrypt.
Please don't get me wrong. I'm glad the world has mostly transitioned over to HTTPS, but what are you actually concerned about with reading a blog post over HTTP? If you had to log in or post form data, or hosted binaries or something I would get it. But what is wrong with reading an article in the clear? And how would SSL prevent that?
I prefer a nice cappuccino, but sometimes all that's available is plain black coffee from the shared pot in the canteen (which someone could have tampered with).
But we drink it anyway (at risk) because it's free.
But how do you know, that if kroah.com would use Let's Encrypt it would belong to Greg K-H? What if his true WEB-site would be e.g. greg-k-h.com?
Right. Also, when it comes to the other aspects of TLS, such as preventing middlemen from making sense of what information flows between you and the server, what exactly is the threat in this case? I mean, it's a public blog post, which you only ask to read and so you are served.
It's not about threat, it's about privacy. I understand your statements but 'what is the threat in this case' to answer that: I don't want to know, I've moved on from those worries. Always encrypt.
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Objectively better than serving 12MB of JavaScript slop, trackers, and "analytics" over HTTPS so you can share a recipe for flan.
Greg K-H has more credibility than 99% of posters here.
He's literally the #2 guy in Linuxworld (behind Linus). What have you done?
You enumerated the security risks of clear text transmission over the Internet and everything came up green because the blogger works on Linux?
Please don't get me wrong. I'm glad the world has mostly transitioned over to HTTPS, but what are you actually concerned about with reading a blog post over HTTP? If you had to log in or post form data, or hosted binaries or something I would get it. But what is wrong with reading an article in the clear? And how would SSL prevent that?
If you are too afraid to click a cleartext HTTP link then don't; it's not for you. Just spare the rest of us the melodrama.
While you are at it, better not ever update Debian or any number of other OSes because their updates are served over plain HTTP.
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I enjoy this person's writings, and contributions. I am Linux's biggest fan and research cyber security daily.
I would prefer https.
I prefer a nice cappuccino, but sometimes all that's available is plain black coffee from the shared pot in the canteen (which someone could have tampered with).
But we drink it anyway (at risk) because it's free.