MG Siegler at TechCrunch to write for the 2009 year. It covers web, mobile, social, big companies, small companies, almost all. And Apple. A lot. Prior to TechCrunch it covers different technologies beats for VentureBeat. Originally from Ohio, mg attended the University of Michigan. He previously lived in Los Angeles, where he worked in Hollywood and in San Diego where ... ? Read More

In March, after at least one high profile security incident Twitter created the option Enable HTTPS at all times. But a more secure way to view the twitter.com could include only manually by selecting it in your profile (or typing "https://" every time you went to Twitter). Today, the service begins to enable HTTPS by default.
Firstly this will include only a small group of users, says Twitter. Over time they will expand it more. This is a welcome change, which added other services like Gmail, over the years. Google even experimented with it on google.com, and Facebook is able to use it, and after many years of avoiding it.
Many services, avoid it because it means a small performance hit. Others don't like it, because he scrubs the data transfer. And this may mean that some of these third parties may be funky. However, in the era of Firesheep HTTPS becomes necessary.
If you're not in the default test group and want to learn more about HTTPS, you can do so here. Twitter recommends that all lit it at the time as they slowly roll it all.
Twitter, founded by Jack Dorsey, Biz Stone and Evan Williams in March 2006, (publicly launched in July 2006,), is a social network and micro-blogging service that allows users ...

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