> they will support it only for HTTPS URIs No. They may do that now but the intention is to support HTTP URIs that force TLS but allow self-signed certificates. See https://wiki.mozilla.org/Networking/http2 "There is a…
You are misunderstanding. The requirement for CA-issued certificates and most of the other things you are ranting about will still be only for HTTPS, which will still be optional. HTTP URIs in HTTP/2 will only need…
I think the point is that Chrome uses PPAPI for both Flash and EME. Firefox also uses some kind of sandbox for plugins (like Flash) but yes, their planned sandbox for EME is stricter.
Science Fiction is not relevant here. As for physics, you are mistaken. The only kind of "time travel" that has any basis in physics is the one using Closed Timelike Curves (which is what the article is about) and those…
> they will support it only for HTTPS URIs No. They may do that now but the intention is to support HTTP URIs that force TLS but allow self-signed certificates. See https://wiki.mozilla.org/Networking/http2 "There is a…
You are misunderstanding. The requirement for CA-issued certificates and most of the other things you are ranting about will still be only for HTTPS, which will still be optional. HTTP URIs in HTTP/2 will only need…
I think the point is that Chrome uses PPAPI for both Flash and EME. Firefox also uses some kind of sandbox for plugins (like Flash) but yes, their planned sandbox for EME is stricter.
Science Fiction is not relevant here. As for physics, you are mistaken. The only kind of "time travel" that has any basis in physics is the one using Closed Timelike Curves (which is what the article is about) and those…