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by sundarurfriend
1975 days ago
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> Eh, 98.24% of all users worldwide can use TLS 1.2: https://caniuse.com/?search=tls%201.2 That's 98.24% of users captured by CanIUse's sources (which seems to be StatCounter). Like most things on the Internet, that's a bubble - the bubble of users who visit statcounter-infested websites, and are able to run their scripts. And the point of the original post is to think outside the bubble. Not in all cases - if you're a B2B service, or selling T-shirts with slogans on them, CanIUse is likely a good enough source to base your choices on. But if you're a government website, or providing critical Covid-19 data for example, it's irresponsible to ignore these long-tail of users who fall outside expected and easily visible patterns. There's a spectrum between these two kinds of websites, and it's worth thinking about where you fall on that and how many you're comfortable with denying access to your website. It's a tradeoff between security and accessibility, and we should at least be thoughtful about the implications of our decisions. |
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And honestly, I think a lot of people in the second group are there because they bought smartphone in 2007 and won't upgrade because "if it ain't broke, don't fix it". Well, now it's broken. Fix it.