The Atlantic

Encryption Won’t Stop Your Internet Provider From Spying on You

Data patterns alone can be enough to give away what video you’re watching on YouTube.
Source: Mario Laporta / AFP / Getty

Earlier this month, a lobby group for major internet providers like Comcast and Verizon attacked a set of online-privacy regulations that they believe are too strict. In a filing to the Federal Communication Commission, the group argued that providers should be able to sell customers’ internet history without the customers’ permission, because that information shouldn’t be considered sensitive. Besides, the group contended, web traffic is increasingly encrypted anyway, making it invisible to providers.

It’s certainly true that encryption is on the rise online. , the company behind the popular Firefox browser, shows that use HTTPS, a lock icon appears in users’ web browsers, indicating that the information being sent to and from servers is scrambled and can’t be read by a third party that intercepts it—that includes ISPs.

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