Google makes Gmail more secure in light of NSA snooping
Your Gmail inbox may
well be full of chain letters and kitten photos, but Google just
announced two security changes that'll help keep prying eyes away from
all your important messages. From now on, Google will always use a
secure HTTPS connection when you're checking or firing off emails. You
may remember that Google made such secure browser connections the
default back in early 2010, but you always had the
option to disable
HTTPS if you really believed in the security of your network.
The second (and arguably juicier) change is that your messages will be
encrypted as they get routed through the company's many data centers. Google isn't exactly being coy about why, either. It said in a blog post
that internally encrypting those messages became a priority "after last
summer's revelations"... a not-so-subtle way of saying it doesn't want
organizations like the NSA poking around where users don't want them.
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