Phoronix reports the Mozilla Security Engineering team is planning to make their browser useless for browsing much of the World Wide Web, by deprecating insecure HTTP.
Richard Barnes of Mozilla writes:
In order to encourage web developers to move from HTTP to HTTPS, I would like to propose establishing a deprecation plan for HTTP without security. Broadly speaking, this plan would entail limiting new features to secure contexts, followed by gradually removing legacy features from insecure contexts. Having an overall program for HTTP deprecation makes a clear statement to the web community that the time for plaintext is over -- it tells the world that the new web uses HTTPS, so if you want to use new things, you need to provide security.
See also this document outlining the initial plans.
(Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 15 2015, @10:01PM
We gave on that a while ago. HTTPS is used for verifying that you really are connected to the domain in your browser's address bar and that no one else can read or modify your communications with that domain. Extended Validation Certificates [wikipedia.org] are for verifying that a specific organization has control over that domain.