Schumer Calls on Amazon, Twitter to Switch to More Secure HTTPS
New York Sen. Charles Schumer is asking Amazon, Twitter and other popular Websites to switch to the more secure HTTPS protocol, as Google and Facebook have.
U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer is on a new consumer-protection mission. At a press event Feb. 27, he called on Amazon, Twitter and other major U.S. Website operators to switch from the HTTP-based Web address protocol to the more secure HTTPS-based addresses, according to a Feb. 28 report from Reuters. The N.Y. Democrat held the event at a Manhattan coffee shop, drawing attention to the fact that ever-increasing numbers of consumers rely on WiFi access at such shops, as well as bookstores and similar public locales, where hackers can too easily use the connection to access personal information such credit card numbers and passwords.
"Over the last few months, we've been researching the
security/latency trade-off and decided that turning HTTPS [HTTP
Secure] on for everyone was the right thing to do," Gmail Engineering
Director Sam Schillace wrote Jan. 12 on the official Gmail blog.
That same month, Facebook blogger
Alex Rice announced that the social-networking site was developing a "number of
complex systems that operate behind the scenes to keep you secure on Facebook."
One of these was HTTP- which Rice explained is identified by the icon of a
lock on many shopping and banking sites.
"Facebook currently uses HTTPS whenever your password is
sent to us, but today we're
expanding its usage in order to help keep your data even more secure," said
Rice.
As of Jan. 26, Facebook began offering users the opportunity
of operating entirely over HTTPS.
"You should consider enabling this option if you frequently
use Facebook from public Internet access points found at coffee shops,
airports, libraries or schools," Rice added. "The option will exist as part of
our advanced security features, which you can find in the "Account
Security" section of the Account Settings page."
Schumer reportedly also sent a letter to major Website
operators, asking them to make the switch to HTTPS, though the contents of this
correspondence weren't shared on his Website.









