Hello, On Sat, Jan 10, 2015 at 12:09:38AM -0800, Constantine A. Murenin wrote: > I am sincerely asking for the IETF to not approve HTTP/2 as a standard > without the compatibility issues as above being addressed first. The > policy to abandon the http:// address scheme and adopt https:// will > only promote a significant link rot for the future generations to > experience well into the future (didn't we think TLS 1.0 was good > enough?), and will curtail independent and hobbyist operators. Please note that the protocol *does* support http:// address scheme, it's only that two browsers decided that they will not implement it. Let's hope that they'll change their mind when HTTP/2 starts reaching normal users and is no more limited to huge sites with lots of people to manage certificates. To their defense, the last reported connection upgrade success rates were rather low (80-90% or something like this) and it can take a few years for broken intercepting proxies to be upgraded/fixed at ISPs. I don't remember when that measure was done, I guess it was 3 years ago for WebSocket. But I do still hope we'll see support for http:// over HTTP/2 in all browsers when HTTP/2 becomes the most commonly deployed version. Best regards, Willy