back to article Facebook starts going encrypted by default in North America

Facebook is finally deploying secure browsing for its 1-billion-strong userbase over the coming weeks. It confirmed the move on its developers' blog last week: As announced last year, we are moving to HTTPS for all users. This week, we're starting to roll out HTTPS for all North America users and will be soon rolling out to …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Any approved encryption scheme

    Can be read by governments at will. To them it is a minor inconvenience.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Any approved encryption scheme

      Meanwhile, where people don't don tinfoil headwear...

  2. Tom Chiverton 1 Silver badge

    no one will notice the speed change. bet ya.

  3. dephormation.org.uk
    Boffin

    'presumably be left in the dark on that too'

    Supposedly, if the insane CCDP plan were to go ahead, all encrypted traffic will be decrypted by black boxes supplied by GCHQ.

    That means GCHQ would have access to the content of *all* UK interactions with Facebook.

    Or none at all. Depending on who you believe.

  4. g7rp0
    FAIL

    It will still be untrustworthy

    But in an encrypted kinda way

  5. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

    Shurely shome mishtake

    Mark Zuckerberg's content-free ad network - ed

    1. Elmer Phud

      Re: Shurely shome mishtake

      Ads? - I don't see any on Facebook

      (right click, add to AdBlock)

      (smug git Icon)

  6. Wokstation

    Twitter already is https

    The UK government mentioning twitter as one of the things they want to monitor the "who" on makes me smile, given it's already encrypted...

    1. Fuzz

      Re: Twitter already is https

      and posts on twitter are private how?

      1. Wokstation

        Re: Twitter already is https

        If you set them to private...? If you send a DM? Not all Twitter interactions are public. And even the public tweets would require a system allowing uk.gov to either cache the lot or target users under their jurisdiction only. The former would mean a LOT of noise, the latter would require Twitter's co-operation. Something I don't see them doing without a law or court order making them.

        So it *seems* the IMP can't even target one of the more public social platforms properly, unless the AC in the 1sr comment is correct.

  7. Graham Marsden
    WTF?

    "the UK's spooks claim...

    "...they have no interest in what it said, only in who talks to who"

    And we all believe them, don't we, boys and girls...!

    (And shouldn't that be "whom"?!)

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