| > "Mostly"?! That's quite a stretch! You're attributing direct and explicit actions taken by a specific subset of site operators as caused by the device manufacturer, which it is clearly not! The sites disabled those methods because they were no longer secure. We know that TLS implementations lose security over time. Anyone locking in a specific implementation and specific certs knows it will stop being fully secure after a while, even in a world where sites try their absolute hardest to be compatible. So yes, I mostly blame the manufacturer. Sites could allow older ciphers, but to have non-broken HTTP Secure requires the manufacturer to update things. > if you're running the latest User-Agent software in December 2020, access to pre-TLSv1.2 sites is likely already disabled It's not the worst plan in the world to wait for clients to forcibly disable old ciphers, but it means that even if all your site's visitors support a new version, they won't all be reliably using it. Maybe now that browsers can enforce things better, and downgrade attack detection is better, it's safe enough to reenable older ciphers on some servers. But there were good reasons to disable them. > actual need All sites should have crypto. No sites "actually need" it if you're willing to work around it hard enough, but all sites should have it. > The evidence appears to show otherwise. Capitalism -- Google, Bing, Amazon -- doesn't care if anyone still uses TLSv1.0; they'll still serve everyone to make a sale. Ironically, it's the non-profits "socialists" -- Wikipedia, Mozilla, EFF -- who (inadvertently?) promote planned device obsolescence by intentionally deprecating all backwards compatibility on the internet. Oh, I thought you were saying capitalism causes obsolescence. But now I'm confused. When you said "this also proves the point about capitalism", what was "the point" being proven? |
My point about capitalism is exactly that -- capitalism -- Google, Bing, even Amazon (i.e., companies that make the most money from the web) -- show that HTTPS is entirely optional (Google Search and Bing both work over HTTP just fine), and TLSv1.0 provided by the server is just as secure at TLSv1.2-only servers (Google, Microsoft, Amazon).
I can still use any device from the last 20+ years to access both Google Search and Bing. If you intentionally disable your blog from working on such older devices, shifting the blame to device manufacturer is simply ludicrous! All my sites are HTTP-only, so, anyone anywhere can access them, from any device, over any connection (some WiFi via satellite links only allow HTTP-only traffic for free -- I win again), and with any browser. They are not in any way "insecure", either, unlike what the newer browsers might tell you. I can reach as large a variety of visitors as Google and Bing if I simply don't listen to what Mozilla, EFF and Google itself tells me on how to run my website.