Which browsers support 128 bit encryption




















Instead, this was a money-maker for them. Apr 27, PM. Question: Q: which browser with encryption work with a mac?? More Less. Communities Get Support. Sign in Sign in Sign in corporate.

Browse Search. Ask a question. User profile for user: seabassmty seabassmty. Question: Q: Question: Q: which browser with encryption work with a mac?? Reply I have this question too 30 I have this question too Me too 30 Me too. All replies Drop Down menu. This process can take anywhere from a few minutes to a couple of hours depending on your connection to the Microsoft Web site, so we suggest you begin it when you have some time to spare. You may want to write down the name and location of this file to ensure you can find it later.

Once the download is complete, exit your browser by selecting the File menu item from the top pull-down bar and choosing Exit.

Install the software by double-clicking on the setup icon on your desktop or in the location you saved the file named ie6setup. The Internet Explorer Installation wizard will walk you through the installation, and then you will be ready to go. To verify that the bit encryption is in place, start the new browser, select the Help menu item from the top pull-down bar and choose About Internet Explorer If websites complain about bit encryption not available then that can be caused by the "U;" that is no longer present in the Firefox user agent.

We did not detect that your web browser supports bit high encryption. If you have trouble connecting after you click the "Continue" button below, you will need to upgrade your web browser to a version that supports bit encryption. This is the message I get when I try to log on to this site so who ever is saying Fire Fox supports bit encryption please explain this message.

Search Support Search. How can I duplicate this functionality inside a php page? Clarification The old webmaster found a link to verisign that that did the browser check. Verisign has since stopped supporting this link. If it's not at least then we simply tell them to upgrade there browser.

All modern browsers support bit encryption out of the box. Do you have a need to support browsers older than IE 5. You could either check the User-Agent string of the browser and make assumptions, or you could direct them to a page that uses a bit SSL certificate and if they continue through it.. If you don't understand the difference then I expect you won't really understand any answer to the implied question of 'how do you measure encryption quality in php?

First, there is no way to test if a browser supports a particular encryption algorithm or key size other than to test connecting using that encryption method - so that means configuring multiple different levels of encryption on your server and creating web pages in each one then testing what the browser can connect to.

This not a trivial task, and not something most people would ever come across in normal life. So really I suspect you are asking the wrong question, but I can't tell what the right question is until you can answer this:.

In SSL the client connects and sends the list of ciphers it supports; then the server selects one of the ciphers it also supports, and that cipher is used for the connection. Only when the connection is established the "handshake" is finished does HTTP come into play. In your setup, this means that you should configure your SSL server to accept a variety of ciphers, but to favor those with a private key of bits or more over others.

Thus, a less-thanbits cipher will be selected only if no bits-or-more cipher is supported by both client and server. Then, the page sent within that connection would be altered, depending on the actually negotiated cipher. Hence point 3 looks easy too. I am not sure how this translates into the PHP world, however.



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