Sat 26 Jul 2008
from PC Pro: News:
Google is giving Gmail users the option to encrypt messages sent using the webmail service.
Users can now select to have their messages sent over a secure socket layer connection HTTPS by default, in a bid to prevent messages being intercepted on open Wi-Fi connections or in a net café.
Previously, Gmail users had to manually enter the https://www.gmail.com address rather than the standard http://www.gmail.com address to turn the encryption on.
“If you want to always use https, then this setting makes it super easy,” Gmail’s magnificently-named engineer, Ariel Rideout, writes on the Google blog. “Whenever you forget to type https://mail.google.com, we’ll add the https for you. If you already have the https URL bookmarked, using this setting will ensure you access your account via https even when you don’t use your bookmark.”
Rideout admits that using the https encryption will slow the performance of Gmail. “Your computer has to do extra work to decrypt all that data, and encrypted data doesn’t travel across the internet as efficiently as unencrypted data,” she says. “That’s why we leave the choice up to you.”
The encryption function is currently being rolled out across the service, and will be found in the Gmail settings menu.
One Response to “Google offers Gmail encryption”
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July 26th, 2008 at 6:20 pm
I tested this a few days ago with a co-worker, and it also encrypts the Google Talk and AIM if you use the web client built into GMail.
Of course, the e-mails and instant messages are stored and sent from Google in-the-clear via SMTP, XMPP and OSCAR, so this isn’t truly encrypted e-mail or instant messaging. It’ll still keep your corporate network guys from seeing what you’re doing unless they have an SSL Decrypting proxy, but that’s another story for another time!