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Http Protocol

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  1. Google Chrome to Encrypt All Searches

    Rather, Google said that through its SPDY protocol, users might see an improvement in speed. Google Chrome 25, like Firefox and iOS 6, will soon automatically encrypt web searches sent to Google through its Omnibox.

  2. Google's Vint Cerf Celebrates 30 Years of TCP/IP

    The start of 2013 marks a significant milestone for the internet, as it is 30 years ago that Arpanet, precursor of the modern day internet, was switched to running on the TCP/IP protocol stack, a move that paved the way for the global internet as...

  3. Google Crisis Response: From Search Engine to Information Provider

    Now we work with our satellite imagery providers, local organizations and other external data providers to help them embrace open standards such as a standard called the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP).

  4. Note to FTC: Google Satisfies Information Needs Way More Than Shopping Needs

    And given the pace that end users now generate content, and the limitations that the protocol of the world wide web places on crawling, it’s not likely that it ever will. “Picture the communications future: every home linked via cable TV, push...

  5. World IPv6 Launch: What it Means for Content Owners & SEO

    The real solution is a new addressing scheme, which has been defined as a standard since the 1990s, but is only now starting to see wider commercial adoption: Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6). The vast majority of IP addresses in use today...

  6. Google, Microsoft Pitch HTTP Overhaul Options for Speedier Web

    In Paris, engineers at the IETF met to take steps to overhaul Hypertext Transfer Protocol, known to the average person as HTTP. Why do we need to change HTTP? Tim Berners-Lee was the creator of HTTP for the World Wide Web more than 20 years ago.

  7. Microsoft Snipes (Only) at Google Over Browser Settings Circumvention Controversy

    Microsoft uses a 'self-declaration' protocol (known as “P3P”) dating from 2002 under which Microsoft asks websites to represent their privacy practices in machine-readable form. Cranor had explained in her post that IE would block third-party...