actually that isn't true either. Just install a newer version of
firefox or chrome or whatever..then you are independent of the operating
system in many cases.
On 3/26/2016 9:00 AM, Dennis Jacobfeuerborn wrote:
On 25.03.2016 17:29, Eero Volotinen wrote:
@Eero: IMHO you are missing some points here. There are more and more
browsers that are unable to use SSL{2,3} as well as TLS1.0, not just
disabled via config, but this decission was made at compile time.
Newer Android and Apple-iOS devices for example.
This is not true. it works fine with latest android and ios. I just tested
it.
The latest version of Android is Marshmallow and currently is only
installed on 2.3% of the devices out there:
http://developer.android.com/about/dashboards/index.html
You cannot just support the latest version of a client if your site is
accessed by regular users out there.
And the point is not that the site supports TLS1.0, but that it does
not support TLS1.1 and/or TLS 1.2, and as such is incassessible
to devices that ask for TLS1.1 as minimum for HTTPS.
But that is for the admins/webmasters of the servers to resolve.
Many sites are still using centos 5 and clones and cannot support tls 1.2
and tls 1.1 without upgrade.
Then they might be forced to upgrade to a newer CentOS version. If you
only run your personal blog then you can of course whatever you want but
if you run a commercial site then the OS you can run depends on what the
clients support and not the other way around.
Regards,
Dennis
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