Wednesday, November 5, 2014

If your website still uses HTTP, the X-UIDH header has turned you into a snitch

Does your website still use HTTP? It not, you're a snitch.

As I talk to people about privacy, I've found a lot of misunderstanding. HTTPS applies encryption to the communication channel between you and the website you're looking at. It's an absolute necessity when someone's making a password or sending a credit card number, but the modern web environment has also made it important for any communication that expects privacy.

HTTP is like sending messages on a postcard. Anyone handling the message can read the whole message. Even worse, they can change the message if they want. HTTPS is like sending the message in a sealed envelope. The messengers can read the address, but they can't read or change the contents.

It used to be that network providers didn't read your web browsing traffic or insert content into it, but now they do so routinely. This week we learned that Verizon and AT&T were inserting an "X-UIDH" header into your mobile phone web traffic. So for example, if a teen was browsing a library catalog for books on "pregnancy" using a mobile phone, Verizon's advertising partners could, in theory, deliver advertising for maternity products.

The only way to stop this header insertion is for websites to use HTTPS. So do it. Or you're a snitch.

Sorry, Blogger.com doesn't support HTTPS. So if you mysteriously get ads for snitch-related products, or if the phrase "Verizon and AT&T" is not equal to "V*erizo*n and A*T*&T" without the asterisks, blame me and blame Google.

Here's more on the X-UIDH header.

1 comment:

  1. I'd like to make my site https, but my provider wants to charge me for it.

    rjb

    ReplyDelete

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