Chrome didn’t already default to https? Why?
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Pushing traffic to https isn’t the worst thing. My ask would be to have a toggle to disable due to local development or server deployments where http/port 80 is the only choice.
It does specifically say "defaulting to https:// if the site supports it", so I think specifying http will still work if the site doesn't actually support https.
No testing a server side http-to-https upgrade/redirect without reconfiguring your browser. This seems like an unnecessary and bad idea.
This could be easily done better by promoting such server-side configurations as a default.
I mean, why should the browser attempt to correct inappropriately configured servers? Shouldn't they rather be making PRs to NGINX/Apache/CAs or whatever?
Also: can't this be exploited to spoof an unavailable HTTPS and coerce an unencrypted connection?
Got a message back from Https, let's switch!
The message:
"Internal nginx routing error."
Not touching chromium or chrome. Sworry! Happy with Firefox.
Their Googlebot has been pushing https hard for years. I really don't see the point for mundane sites with no sensitive or controversial content, but there is no way to fight Google so like a good little site operator I go along if I want to be in Google search results.