Google will retire Chrome’s HTTPS padlock icon because no one knows what it means

Google will retire Chrome’s HTTPS padlock icon because no one knows what it means

Illustration of a padlock over a computer-chip circuit board.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Yuichiro Chino)

One of the biggest advances in Web security over the last decade or so is the proliferation of secure, encrypted HTTPS connections. Once the purview of shopping and banking sites, HTTPS connections have become the norm rather than the exception, keeping more of your credentials and data safe from being intercepted even when you're on public or insecure networks.

Browsers going all the way back to Internet Explorer have used a small padlock icon to denote that a connection is using HTTPS. But according to the team behind the Chromium browser engine, most people still don't know what that padlock icon actually means. Because of that confusion, and because HTTPS is now expected for most sites, Chromium will retire the padlock icon starting in Chrome 117, slated for release in September alongside a larger refresh of the Chrome interface.

"Replacing the lock icon with a neutral indicator prevents the misunderstanding that the lock icon is associated with the trustworthiness of a page, and emphasizes that security should be the default state in Chrome," reads a Chromium blog post from the Chrome security team.

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