Chrome 68 for mac

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We knew that rolling out the warning to all HTTP pages would take some time, so we started by only marking pages without encryption that collect passwords and credit card info.

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83 of the top 100 sites on the web use HTTPS by default, up from 37.85 percent of Chrome traffic on ChromeOS is now protected, up from 67 percent.76 percent of Chrome traffic on Android is now protected, up from 42 percent.We’ve found in our Transparency Report that: Since our announcement nearly two years ago, HTTPS usage has made incredible progress. With HTTPS, your connection to the site is encrypted, so eavesdroppers are locked out, and information (like passwords or credit card info) will be private when sent to the site.Ĭhrome’s “not secure” warning helps you understand when the connection to the site you're on isn’t secure and, at the same time, motivates the site's owner to improve the security of their site. This means anyone on the network can look at any information going back and forth, or even modify the contents of the site before it gets to you. When you load a website over plain HTTP, your connection to the site is not encrypted. More encrypted connections, more security