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Total Votes: 46 |
SSL, or Secure Socket
Layers, is what makes secure sites secure.
Here's how it works:
When you log onto a secure server it communicates with your browser
for a few seconds. During this communication, it sends your browser
encryption information that only it and your browser can
read.
Once this encryption is set, it acts like a normal web page, except
that all info coming or going is encrypted. This encryption makes
it extremely difficult for any third party who would intercept the
transaction to decipher it. (All this extra protection is why
secure servers seem to run slower than their unsecure
counterparts.)
Secure connections only protect the info as its coming and going,
not when it's just sitting on the server.
That being said, you probably have a better chance of getting
ripped off by a sales clerk copying your credit card number at a
department store than getting your information stolen over the
Internet.
You can tell a secure site by the
first part of its web address. If it starts with
https:// rather than http:// it's a secure
site.
~Andrew
Computer Tips with MS Office Tips Newsletter


