D
Deleted member 4320
I found out yesterday something quite cool with one of Chrome's flags. If you're not aware, many browsers have something called 'Flags', which are basically settings that you can turn on and off to give you extra features. Lots of them are focused on development but some are just handy in the UI.
If you use Chrome you might notice some websites have an SSL certificate where it secures the connection on a website and provides a green padlock.
In the future Google is phasing out the not-so-secure HTTP and explicitly stating it's insecurities. However you can enable this now if you want to, to get use to the setting, plus it's nice to see which sites are not using HTTPS already. To enable it, go to chrome://flags.
Or you can go directly to chrome://flags/#mark-non-secure-as which will jump to the right section. There's a drop down with a couple of options but you need to select "Always mark HTTP as actively dangerous". The relaunch Chrome and you'll see the warnings!
There you go...

If you use Chrome you might notice some websites have an SSL certificate where it secures the connection on a website and provides a green padlock.
In the future Google is phasing out the not-so-secure HTTP and explicitly stating it's insecurities. However you can enable this now if you want to, to get use to the setting, plus it's nice to see which sites are not using HTTPS already. To enable it, go to chrome://flags.
Or you can go directly to chrome://flags/#mark-non-secure-as which will jump to the right section. There's a drop down with a couple of options but you need to select "Always mark HTTP as actively dangerous". The relaunch Chrome and you'll see the warnings!
There you go...







