RED LOCK ON RECEIVED GMAIL
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maladri
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maladri Posted messages 637 Status Membre -
maladri Posted messages 637 Status Membre -
Good evening,
For a few days now, without having new contacts, some emails that I receive or those previously received have a red padlock.
When I hover the mouse over it without clicking, here is what appears.
The domain dsnpro.org did not encrypt this message.
Here is an example of the social security which is an old message and did not have this padlock at the time
https://www.transfernow.net/?utm_source=partagefichierscom&utm_medium=download
Thank you.
For a few days now, without having new contacts, some emails that I receive or those previously received have a red padlock.
When I hover the mouse over it without clicking, here is what appears.
The domain dsnpro.org did not encrypt this message.
Here is an example of the social security which is an old message and did not have this padlock at the time
https://www.transfernow.net/?utm_source=partagefichierscom&utm_medium=download
Thank you.
1 réponse
Hello
it's new
A bit of reading
https://www.numerama.com/tech/144495-gmail-vous-protege-des-fraudes-et-vous-previent-si-vos-mails-ne-sont-pas-chiffres.html
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There are 3 types of people: those who can count and those who cannot.
it's new
A bit of reading
https://www.numerama.com/tech/144495-gmail-vous-protege-des-fraudes-et-vous-previent-si-vos-mails-ne-sont-pas-chiffres.html
--
There are 3 types of people: those who can count and those who cannot.
I read the link, but I didn't understand anything because half of it is in English.
Is it dangerous or not?
What should I do? All my emails have the red lock.
I was concerned about my bank's online service.
Here is a response I obtained on the Gmail forum.
According to all indications, your online bank does indeed use TLS to encrypt its communications with its clients (if not, run away), but without having it certified. The novelty introduced in Gmail by this red padlock is that it informs users that the TLS encryption has not been validated by a "trusted third party," a "Certification Authority."
In fact, this has been practiced for several years at the browser level: Chrome or Firefox strike through or write in red the "https" at the beginning of the URLs of "self-signed" sites (i.e., encrypted without CA validation). Those that are compliant with the rule are instead marked with a nice green padlock.
Gmail uses an encryption technique for emails.
If someone does not use it, Gmail shows a red lock.
There's nothing you can do about it.
Before, it was the same, but the lock was not displayed.