mrbluze writes:
"A modified HTTP protocol is being proposed (the proposal is funded by AT&T) which would allow ISP's to decrypt and re-encrypt traffic as part of day to day functioning in order to save money on bandwidth through caching. The draft document states:
To distinguish between an HTTP2 connection meant to transport "https" URIs resources and an HTTP2 connection meant to transport "http" URIs resource, the draft proposes to 'register a new value in the Application Layer Protocol negotiation (ALPN) Protocol IDs registry specific to signal the usage of HTTP2 to transport "http" URIs resources: h2clr.
The proposal is being criticized by Lauren Weinstein in that it provides a false sense of security to end users who might believe that their communications are actually secure. Can this provide an ISP with an excuse to block or throttle HTTPS traffic?"
(Score: 1) by mindriot on Monday February 24 2014, @10:06PM
I guess you're right in that metadata exploitation would be somewhat hindered by the anonymity afforded by a caching proxy (although that assumes that adversaries/certain agencies will not have access to your organization's proxy).
The bigger problem I see is that there is not only the metadata problem to cope with, there is also the problem that only tech-savvy users would even be aware of its existence while everyone else could fall for an illusion of security -- "the important sub-units are secure, so I'm perfectly fine and I can do whatever I want".
But it's quite possible that I'm overly worried about this.
soylent_uid=$(echo $slash_uid|cut -c1,3,5)