HTTPS-First upgrades to secure connections

Firefox Firefox 最近更新: 1 week, 1 day ago 50% 使用者覺得這篇文章有幫助
This article describes the HTTPS-First feature, enabled by default in Firefox version 136 and above.

HTTPS-First

When browsing with HTTPS-First, Firefox will always try to connect to websites using a secure, encrypted HTTPS connection first. This ensures you have peace of mind that no one can snoop on the content of the pages you visit or hack into your website connection to steal your passwords, credit card information or other personal information. Most websites already support HTTPS; some support both HTTP and HTTPS. With HTTPS-First, Firefox will try to make sure you have the more secure connection, whenever it is available.

Secure site not available

Some websites only support HTTP and the connection cannot be upgraded. If an HTTPS version of a site is not available, the site will load but through the less secure HTTP protocol. In some cases websites seem to support HTTPS but serve different content from the HTTP version or behave different in other ways. To avoid upgrade attempts users can enter an address in the address bar with an explicit http:// scheme. Permanent exceptions added in the HTTPS-Only Mode section in Firefox settings will also prevent upgrades.

What is the difference between HTTP and HTTPS?

HTTP stands for Hypertext Transfer Protocol and is the foundational protocol for the web and encodes basic interactions between browsers and web servers. The problem with the regular HTTP protocol is that the data transferring from server to browser is not encrypted, meaning data can be viewed, stolen, or altered. The HTTPS protocol fixes this by using an encrypted connection protects sensitive information. It uses digital signatures with public certificate, to ensure that the encrypted connection is established to the right end-point.

這篇文章有幫助嗎?

請稍候…

這些好人幫助我們撰寫了這篇文章:

Illustration of hands

成為志工

在此回答問題並幫助我們改善知識庫內容,與其他人一起切磋琢磨專業能力。

了解更多