You can read more about KRACK attacks here. As we’ve seen with the latest KRACK attacks, it is entirely possible to decrypt a victim’s https traffic. But, SSL is not as safe as we originally thought it was. Therefore, we refer to TLS as SSL version 3 (SSLv3). These days, however, most of our Web servers are utilizing Transport Layer Security (TLS 1.2), which is an updated version of SSL 3.0. This is because https uses the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) encryption scheme to pass keys between two parties over the Internet. Hypertext Transfer Protocol over SSL (https) is pretty decent security.
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