On the apparently looming death of FTP -------------------------------------- About a week ago I noticed somebody mention on a mailing list I'm subscribed to that Google's Chrome browser is soon to start flagging FTP URLs as insecure to the user, presumably in the same way that HTTPS URLs with invalid certificates are flagged. It was speculated that this is perhaps the first step toward deprecating support for the protocol altogether, similar to how Firefox killed support for Gopher quite some time ago. After a bit of searching I found that this is by no means the unilateral move of an arrogant tech giant thinking they can forcibly deprecate core internet technology. Apparently the Debian project announced earlier that this year that come November, all of their FTP servers will be shut down. Apparently this is being presented as no big deal as the installation software has not offered the ability to use FTP for some years. While I suppose I can't, without hypocrisy, criticise Chrome too much on this front because I *am* a long-standing crypto advocate and support the push to use HTTPS for everything, for some reason the fact that nobody is using FTP anymore came as a strong shock to me. The protocol is strongly associated in my mind with Unix installation, and the fact that Debian - who I have always thought of as being one of the most technologically conservative distros - have abandoned it was a surprise. It's just one of those things that I always thought would be around forever. And no doubt it *will* still be around in various roles for some time yet to come, but it does seem conceivable that before too long it will, like Gopher, be some weird specialist thing that you have to use specific software for, rather than expecting it to work in your browser. Nothing online lasts forever, I guess.