Microsoft plans to disable older versions of the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol, the ubiquitous communications encryption used to protect information sent over networks and the Internet.
Azure Storage now requires version 1.2 or newer for encrypted connections Today is the day Azure Storage stops supporting versions 1.0 and 1.1 of Transport Layer Security (TLS). TLS 1.2 is the new ...
Website security and performance vendor CloudFlare has made the newest version of the TLS secure communications protocol available to all of its customers. The TLS (Transport Layer Security) 1.3 ...
As digital networks grow in complexity, securing data in transit has become a top priority. Cyber threats, ranging from man-in-the-middle attacks to large-scale data breaches, make strong encryption ...
Webmasters who patched their sites against a serious SSL flaw discovered in October will have to check them again. Researchers have discovered that the vulnerability also affects implementations of ...
Microsoft will be disabling TLS versions 1.0 and 1.1 on Windows very soon. The company announced it earlier today and is part of its broader strategy to make the next Windows versions more secure.
Cato Networks, a SASE provider, today announced the launch of Cato Safe TLS Inspection, a solution that redefines how enterprises inspect encrypted traffic. With a new data-driven, automated engine ...
Manual TLS certificate management increases outage and security risk as machine identities grow in Singapore enterprises. The post The risks of manual TLS certificate management appeared first on ...
SSL certificates are now expiring faster than avocados. Yes… avocados. You buy them green, blink twice, and suddenly they’re brown and useless. That’s exactly what’s happening to SSL/TLS certificates.