Secure Web Sites

The Internet provides access to endless amounts of information and convenience, but it also carries a certain amount of risk.  While Web browsing tasks such as Internet shopping and banking are on the rise, so are electronic identify theft and fraud.  You should never send personal information over the Internet, including your social security number, bank account numbers, passwords, or credit card numbers, if you are not absolutely certain the organization you are dealing with is legitimate and that their Web site is secure. 

What makes a Web site secure?

A secure Web site uses encryption and authentication standards to protect the confidentiality of information sent during Web transactions.  Encryption is a way of scrambling data so that only the computer and the Web server involved in the transaction can decipher the personal or confidential information.  The most common protocol used for encrypting data is Secure Socket Layer or SSL.  When you connect to a Web site using SSL, your Web browser confirms the identify of the server, or authenticates it, using a digital certificate.  Most Web browsers are configured by default to use SSL for secure sites and to warn you when you enter or leave a site using SSL.

How do I know if the Web site I am browsing is secure?

In addition to the warning messages that many browsers use when you enter or leave secure sites, most browsers also display a security icon, usually a small locked padlock, when you are on a secure Web site.  For Internet Explorer, the icon appears in the lower right corner of the browser.  Mozilla Firefox also displays a padlock icon in the bottom right corner of the browser, in addition to changing the Web address field to yellow and displaying the padlock icon at the end of the Web address field.  For Safari, the icon appears in the upper right corner of the browser.

Internet Explorer SSL security icon

Safari SSL security icon

Secure site icon in Internet Explorer Secure site icon in Safari

 

 Mozilla Firefox secure site
Secure site icon in Mozilla Firefox

You should also check the URL (Web site address) to see if the site is secure.  Secure Web sites will start with https:// instead of just http://.  For general Web browsing, URLs beginning with http:// are fine, but when transmitting personal or confidential information, you want to be sure the site begins with https://.

HTTPS URL

For more information about safety and security on the Internet, including antivirus, phishing, firewall, and spyware information, see the ITS Help Desk Security Center.

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Last Updated: 04/24/2008

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