
@hotfr8,
I disagree with you. It is a FF issue only in that FF is letting everyone know that your site isn't secured from hacking. From what I understand a more secure way of talking between the site and members is available and the site admins either don't understand or is/are being willfully ignorant. On the other hand Privacy Badger shows 0 trackers as does Ghostery, and that is unusually good for a forum.
I get the same with Chrome when I click on the "i" near the URL. Never noticed until I read this thread.
Have you tried using the Tapatalk app for forum access? I think it's pretty slick, makes it very easy.Droid based Internet on my phone does it so bad, and then won't even connect to the site. Not GJ but a big percentage of my searches.
I've just about given up on it, and I can't find a way to turn it off.
I use Chrome because it doesn't do that, but chrome often ignores a goto command and just dumps me on a blank page.
Both are getting frustrating.
IT's on my list fellas.
As an IT guy, I don't get the obsession with added security features on anonymous recreational sites. If somebody hacked my password here, they would gain absolutely nothing. Well, other than my fine reputation as a thread-killer, lol.
I mean seriously, I get it with banks, credit cards, all types of e-commerce, etc. But having to pay for an SSL Certificate on a forum? Seems unnecessary to me.
I am just cranky because I run several non-critical password-required websites, and I have been flooded with end-user tears over this new "security feature". "But... But... It says it isn't secure!" Nothing is secure honey, now go back to sleep.
Looks like an issue with Firefox and not the GJ forum.
As an IT guy, I don't get the obsession with added security features on anonymous recreational sites. If somebody hacked my password here, they would gain absolutely nothing. Well, other than my fine reputation as a thread-killer, lol.
I mean seriously, I get it with banks, credit cards, all types of e-commerce, etc. But having to pay for an SSL Certificate on a forum? Seems unnecessary to me.
I am just cranky because I run several non-critical password-required websites, and I have been flooded with end-user tears over this new "security feature". "But... But... It says it isn't secure!" Nothing is secure honey, now go back to sleep.
The VerticalScope hack of recent memory was one where password security came into play. Passwords from the hacked database were used in exploits elsewhere. While YOUR password on this site may not be your banking password (because you're clearly an IT guy who knows better), from the perspective of the attacker, if ANY user uses the same password for an "anonymous recreational site" for their banking information, then the attacker wins. Where the responsibility for this lies is a matter for debate, but rather than spiraling the drain by passing blame around to banks who should be doing a better job of establishing a customer's AAA, to owners of sites such as this who should be securing passwords accepted from a user, and to users who take no responsibility with their passwords, the industry has chosen the path of giving a bite of the sandwich to everyone instead. The idea is that if everyone takes some time to consider security, everyone gains.
As for having to pay for an SSL Certificate, that's no excuse. You could always have used a self-signed SSL Certificate for free. Users would still get an error, though not the same one, and unlike the new browser imposed error, the data in transit would still be secured. And if they saved the self-signed certificate for your site, they would still be alerted to a man-in-the-middle attack. Do you seal your envelopes when you send your mail?
And there's always free SSL Certificate options. I use one from StartSSL for my personal systems.
...A few idiot people with bad passwords, a few idiot site developers, and a few ******* hackers to connect the dots will always be out there no matter what the technology...
Looks like an issue with Firefox and not the GJ forum.
As an IT guy, I don't get the obsession with added security features on anonymous recreational sites. If somebody hacked my password here, they would gain absolutely nothing. Well, other than my fine reputation as a thread-killer, lol.
I mean seriously, I get it with banks, credit cards, all types of e-commerce, etc. But having to pay for an SSL Certificate on a forum? Seems unnecessary to me.
I am just cranky because I run several non-critical password-required websites, and I have been flooded with end-user tears over this new "security feature". "But... But... It says it isn't secure!" Nothing is secure honey, now go back to sleep.
IT's on my list fellas.
Won't get it into it here but you are missing the point of HTTPS entirely. By the way you don't have to pay for SSL certs, get a free one from Lets Encrypt.
I was going to say the same, certs only cost money if you want one of the higher end ones. The basic ones are now free through orgs like that. Easy to implement too.
The push has a lot to do with not just the hacking aspect, because it doesn't solve that, but for traffic security. Any non-https sites send all their traffic in clear text. If I'm at a Starbucks, I can pull up my traffic analyzer and see what everyone in that store is doing. Pretty damn interesting actually.
Security is going to continue to be a hot button topic in tech for a long time.
Did your phone always do that "duckface"?Droid based Internet on my phone does it so bad, and then won't even connect to the site. Not GJ but a big percentage of my searches.
I've just about given up on it, and I can't find a way to turn it off.
I use Chrome because it doesn't do that, but chrome often ignores a goto command and just dumps me on a blank page.
Both are getting frustrating.
well, since I installed avast on my cell, it tells me walmarts wi- fi is not secure.This guy gets it.![]()
Oh Good, Thank You!!!!!Ryan is looking after it now.
well, since I installed avast on my cell, it tells me walmarts wi- fi is not secure.
does that mean someone in walmart could steal my info, CC numbers and the like?
Oddley, I am not seeing the OP's issue
Ok, got it.Are you doing online shopping while in Walmart using their wifi? And even then, only if you're going to a site without SSL installed.
ANYTIME you put your credit card, social security, or other personal info into an online form, proper safety & security protocol says you need to make sure without a doubt you see a green padlock at the top. That guarantees that no one can see that information you are submitting while it's being transmitted.
It doesn't mean the site is secure from hackers, but it will at least make sure that the hipster sitting at the table next to you with the grin & the macbook isn't noting all your personal information to use or sell later.
well, since I installed avast on my cell, it tells me walmarts wi- fi is not secure.
does that mean someone in walmart could steal my info, CC numbers and the like?
Any updates on this? Getting a SSL is cheap (free) and takes moments to install...
LB-1911,
Thank you for the information but Security on the web is getting some eyes on it. My Firefox now tells me not to log into this site because it is not secure it drivers me crazy.
Im in the IT business and now everything needs to be secure.
Thankx
We are working on it... and no, it doesn't take moments when you are running five different versions of PHP, latest 3-series of VB, 20 years of content, etc... It's actually pretty complicated.
Hope to be done today.
We are working on it... and no, it doesn't take moments when you are running five different versions of PHP, latest 3-series of VB, 20 years of content, etc... It's actually pretty complicated.
Hope to be done today.