HTTPS is a Pyrrhic Victory

So something I’ve talked about in a few Scratchpad posts to date, but haven’t really given the time to talking about it specifically, is HTTPS. HTTPS is the secure version of HTTP, where page content is encrypted to myriad benefits. You might know the song and dance there.

In my less contrarian moments, I don’t think there’s much actually wrong with the use of HTTPS. In the scope of what it was meant to fix, HTTPS does work. Your page and the contents of it get encrypted and no one tampers with your stuff. Sounds great. It murders backwards compatibility with older browsers, but who cares about those, who cares about supporting older hardware. We all use new browsers, it’s fine.

My issue is more with the constant obsession towards keeping a fundamentally public medium private, trying to secure things that just can’t be secured. While we might appreciate the surface benefits towards encrypting our pages (Comcast can’t inject stuff into them, for one), none of that matters when the rest of the chain is so paper thin and weak, and when, HTTPS or not, people’s data is still being systematically harvested, leaked, and exploited. It’s fine to celebrate a victory, just don’t pretend like it means anything.

This starts when I was logging into Letters from Somnolescent and saw this message:

WordPress warning about us not using HTTPS
WordPress is also not fond of you having multiple themes installed. The horror.

Clicking that link takes you to a WordPress.org support article extolling the virtues of HTTPS. It’s fluff–some of it’s true, some of it’s debatable, some of it’s emotional–and kinda manipulative fluff at that. The last bit of the article is what crawled up my ass the furthest:

Your good name. Have you noticed that some websites have the text “not secure” next to their address?

That happens when your web browser wants you to know a site is NOT using HTTPS. Browsers want you to think (rightly!) that site owners who can’t be bothered using HTTPS (it’s free in many cases) aren’t worth your time and certainly not your money.

In turn, you don’t want browsers suggesting you might be that kind of shady site owner yourself.

The sentiment that only idiots and bad people use HTTP is one that’s fairly common among these “why HTTPS is so great” pieces, and one I generally don’t like. HTTPS has some benefits, and thus people push for its use. This turns into manipulation (“Google will demote you, everyone’s doing it, and you don’t want people to think you’re shady and dangerous, do you?”) and then outright fearmongering on the part of browsers by flashing a big “NOT SECURE” sign up top any time you visit one of those spooky HTTP sites.

Problem is, this is a false sense of security that, even if these warnings weren’t meant to apply to the security of the entire transaction, a layman might very well perceive it that way. In English: the padlock doesn’t necessarily mean you’re safe. I want you to consider the amount of moving parts and things that can be bugged or accessed illicitly in one simple transaction, say, sending a password.

  • The user’s computer can have a keylogger on it or be otherwise bugged. Password’s leaked.
  • The site can use both HTTP and HTTPS materials, thus letting someone listen in on what’s being sent. Leaked.
  • Good ol’ human error or not giving a shit. If you give your password to someone, and they’re careless, the password can get out through them.
  • A security breach can happen at the remote site. Someone forgot to update their database software and someone made off with everyone’s passwords and credit card information. Again, human error leads to a data leak.
  • Hell, who says phishing can’t happen over HTTPS?

I can imagine some “I’m so cool because I can write node.js” web developer looking at this and calling it whataboutism, but that’s my point. We’ve spent countless manhours trying to get everyone to up security in this one specific way, handing out Let’s Encrypt certificates and getting browsers to spook people, with the eventual goal being to outright mandate it (fuck freedom of choice, right?), when the underlying premise of security was bullshit in the first place. This is like squabbling over the difference between emptying a fishtank using a hammer or a bullet. That box doesn’t hold water anymore either way.

This only came about because we started abusing the web for things it was never meant to do anyway. The web started as a little research project meant to provide global access to documents, remember? Security wasn’t a concern because it was never meant to do secure things. It was meant to let people read papers online, essentially, and no surprises there, this is what it’s still best at.

The project is based on the philosophy that much academic information should be freely available to anyone. It aims to allow information sharing within internationally dispersed teams, and the dissemination of information by support groups. Originally aimed at the High Energy Physics community, it has spread to other areas and attracted much interest in user support, resource discovery and collaborative work areas.

Yet, because people continually try to shoehorn shit into the original scope of the project (read this page with its “you should use HTTPS because we’re gonna take pictures and geolocate people with the web” fucking idiocy and you’ll see my point), here we are. Most of the time, whatever we’re trying to do to the internet this week doesn’t even work especially well. Things continue to bloat, pages get slower, and the works become even more of a minified black box that your average web user can’t even begin to understand, but as the negative consequences from sending sensitive data through the magical pixie box stack up, we can at least take solace in the fact that at least it didn’t happen over HTTP.

That doesn’t mean there’s no benefit to at least trying to secure things, I suppose, I just wish we stopped throwing technology at fundamentally human problems. If you’re concerned about security, why are you still connected to the internet at all?

I read through a lot of these smarmy “yes, you need HTTPS sweetie uwu” articles and sites tonight, people so arrogantly pushing for something that doesn’t really change the insecure nature of the thing they’re using in the first place. (Seriously, read that link and imagine the permavirgin who wrote it in your head. “Fuck your ad-based livelihood, fuck your freedom of choice to have legacy support, fuck your concerns about who’s actually saying what’s secure, fuck you especially, I’m right and you should do what I say.”)

Fuck this guy
“Oh I’m sorry, what’s that, a valid concern? Fuck you, do it anyway and deal with it. I run a cute one-issue site that condescends to you, so you should listen to me.”

Do we have much of a choice? Do we just give up all this luxury, convenience, and commerce for buying things locally with cash and having perfect anonymity? No, but if you’re willing to take the risk, don’t expect a cute padlock icon to protect you.

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