Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Mar, 2016 01:00 PM
    SAN FRANCISCO — Google is disclosing how much of the traffic to its search engine and other services is being protected from hackers as part of its push to encrypt all online activity.
     
    Encryption shields 77 per cent of the requests sent from around the world to Google's data centres, up from 52 per cent at the end of 2013, according to company statistics released Tuesday.
     
    The numbers cover all Google services expect its YouTube video site, which has more than 1 billion users. Google plans to add YouTube to its encryption breakdown by the end of this year.
     
    Encryption is a security measure that scrambles transmitted information so it's unintelligible if it's intercepted by a third party.
     
    Google began emphasizing the need to encrypt people's online activities after confidential documents leaked in 2013 by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed that the U.S. government had been vacuuming up personal data transferred over the Internet. The surveillance programs exploited gaping holes in unencrypted websites.
     
    While rolling out more encryption on its services, Google has been trying to use the clout of its influential search engine to prod other websites to strengthen their security.
     
    In August 2014, Google revised its secret formula for ranking websites in its search order to boost those that automatically encrypted their services. The change meant websites risked being demoted in Google's search results and losing visitors if they didn't embrace encryption.
     
    Google is highlighting its own progress on digital security while the FBI and Apple Inc. are locked in a court battle over access to an encrypted iPhone used by one of the two extremist killers behind the mass shootings in San Bernardino, California, in December.
     
     
    Google joined several other major technology companies to back Apple in its refusal to honour a court order to unlock the iPhone, arguing that it would require special software that could be exploited by hackers and governments to pry their way into other encrypted devices.
     
    In its encryption crusade, Google's is trying to make it nearly impossible for government spies and other snoops from deciphering personal information seized while in transit over the Internet.
     
    "Our aim with this project is to hold ourselves accountable and encourage others to encrypt so we can make the web even safer for everyone," Google encryption "evangelists" Rutledge Chin Feman and Tim Willis wrote in a blog post .
     
    The statistics show that Google's Gmail service is completely encrypted as long as the correspondence remains confined to Gmail. Mail exchanges between Gmail and other email services aren't necessarily encrypted.
     
    Google's next most frequently encrypted services are maps (83 per cent of traffic) and advertising (77 per cent, up from just 9 per cent at the end of 2013). Encryption frequency falls off for Google's news service (60 per cent) and finance (58 per cent).
     
    Google, owned by Alphabet Inc., says it's still trying to overcome some of the technical problems that have made it more difficult to encrypt some of its services. Some older devices are also unable to handle modern encryption standards, according to Google.
     
    Nearly 96 per cent of Google's unencrypted traffic comes from mobile devices.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Stakes Are High As Blackberry Releases Its First Android Smartphone

    Stakes Are High As Blackberry Releases Its First Android Smartphone
    If the Priv doesn't sell, it's almost certain BlackBerry will pull the plug on designing phones after a series of sales flops whittled down its thriving device business into a money-losing operation.

    Stakes Are High As Blackberry Releases Its First Android Smartphone

    Selfie 'Vending Machines' To Enthral Tourists In Japan

    Selfie 'Vending Machines' To Enthral Tourists In Japan
    To help tourists in Japan take advantage of the new feature, there will also be English, Chinese, and Korean interface options in the machines, 

    Selfie 'Vending Machines' To Enthral Tourists In Japan

    Instagram Most Popular Among US Teenagers

    Facebook, which bought Instagram in 2012, was fourth in the popularity scale, showed the results of the survey by Piper Jaffray, a leading investment bank and asset management firm.

    Instagram Most Popular Among US Teenagers

    Apple Told To Pay $234 Million For Using Two Indian Engineers' Technology Without Permission

    Apple Told To Pay $234 Million For Using Two Indian Engineers' Technology Without Permission
    Tech giant Apple has been told to pay $234 million to the intellectual property arm of Wisconsin University, Madison, for using without permission patented technology developed by its team, including two Indian-American engineers.

    Apple Told To Pay $234 Million For Using Two Indian Engineers' Technology Without Permission

    Canadian Entrepreneur Enters Hands-Free Hoverboard Market Engulfed In Patent War

    Canadian Entrepreneur Enters Hands-Free Hoverboard Market Engulfed In Patent War
    Darren Pereira's Huuver company has begun to sell online its brand of self-balancing electric boards called Uuboard (the first two vowels of both names have umlauts). A Toronto dealership is in the works

    Canadian Entrepreneur Enters Hands-Free Hoverboard Market Engulfed In Patent War

    Don't 'LIKE' Her Post? Facebook To Soon Have 'DISLIKE' Button

    Don't 'LIKE' Her Post? Facebook To Soon Have 'DISLIKE' Button
    According to its CEO Mark Zuckerberg, a “Dislike” button is soon coming to Facebook that will let you reveal true feelings on your friends' wall or respond to anti-humanity posts.

    Don't 'LIKE' Her Post? Facebook To Soon Have 'DISLIKE' Button