I /really/ need to add http://n-gate.com to my rss reader because it’s *so good*. This is the best description I’ve ever seen of the Microsoft acquisition of Github.
@wxcafe Interestingly, n-gate doesn't seem to support https.
@wxcafe Maybe if security doesn't matter to you. Especially given how easy and cost-free it is to set up these days.
@tyil ain’t no point in setting up https for a static site with no exchange of information. Literally who cares.
@wxcafe HTML is information, and the purpose of HTTP is to exchange it.
Anyone intercepting the connection at any point can still inject stuff (like scripts), even if the original host only provides static content. And anyone can still read out the entire message and use it for personal/meta data harvesting.
Anyone understanding what the words "information", "exchange" and "security" mean would care.
@tyil @wxcafe And herein lies the crux: cost/benefit.
Just as there's no magic bullet for security, nor should anything be assumed as default secure, one can't be dogmatic in telling a total strangers what their threat model or cost/benefit is.
I've seen lots of people introduce new security holes trying to make TLS work in their environment. LE made it soooo much easier, but in shared environments (i.e. most hosting), TLS is still non-trivial.
@nickfarr I agree with you, don't get me wrong.
I just wanted to clear up to that person that static pages aren't "secure" any more than other pages. In reality, all content transmitted over HTTP are static pages.