A mai Kérdések és válaszok munkamenetét a SuperUser - a Stack Exchange, a Q & A weboldalak közösség által irányított csoportosulásának részlegével - köszönheti.
A kérdés
A SuperUser olvasó David Starkey tudni akarja, hogy a böngészője szerint a biztonságos weboldal nem teljesen biztonságos:
I was accessing Pandora via SSL and noticed a few icons by the URL. First is this exclamation point in a triangle, indicating the page is not fully secure.
Mi történik itt? Biztos vagy nem David kapcsolat a Pandora weboldalra?
A válasz
A SuperUser munkatársa a redburnnek felel meg nekünk:
This is called a “mixed content” page. From the Mozilla Developer Network (Mixed Content):
If the HTTPS page includes content retrieved through regular, cleartext HTTP, then the connection is only partially encrypted: the unencrypted content is accessible to sniffers and can be modified by man-in-the-middle attackers, and therefore the connection is not safeguarded anymore. When a webpage exhibits this behavior, it is called a mixed content page.
The statements are not contradictory, but complementary, and a little confusing perhaps. The first says the page itself is not fully secure because it contains unencrypted elements (all web browsers will notify you of this), whereas the second notes that these elements have been automatically blocked by Firefox.
If Firefox did not block the unencrypted elements, then strictly speaking, the page would not be secure.
HTTPS Everywhere does not guarantee a secure connection. It will only try to force HTTPS whenever it is available; if it is not, then there is nothing a user or browser can do about it outside of blocking the unsecure content.
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