Facebook turns on secure browsing by default
Facebook turned on a key security feature by default on Wednesday that scrambles data sent by users to the company's servers, following similar moves in recent years by Web services such as Google and Twitter.
Two years ago, the social networking site gave users the option of using TLS (Transport Security Layer) encryption, indicated by "https" in the URL bar. TLS is the successor to SSL (Secure Sockets Layer), a system that uses public key cryptography to ensure greater privacy between two parties.
More than a third of users flipped on TLS, but it was not made a default due to a variety of engineering challenges, wrote Scott Renfro, a software engineer with Facebook's Security Infrastructure team in London. One problem is latency. Facebook has been using techniques that help speed up the response of its servers for users in places such as Jakarta, who may endure a slower response with a Facebook server in Prineville, Oregon, than someone in Canada.