How your web browser tells you when it's safe

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Google last week spelled out the schedule it will use to reverse years of advice from security experts when browsing the Web - to "look for
the padlock." Starting in July, the search giant will mark insecure URLs in its market-dominant Chrome, not those that already are secure
Google's goal Pressure all website owners to adopt digital certificates and encrypt the traffic of all their pages.The decision to tag
HTTP sites - those not locked down with a certificate and which don't encrypt server-to-browser and browser-to-server communications -
rather than label the safer HTTPS websites, didn't come out of nowhere
Google has been promising as much since 2014.