Sun.Star Cebu

‘Insecure’ sites of politician­s

For the Filipino voter, an insecure website of a politician means not only security risks but also how candidates for the midterm elections this May do not give importance to the quality of informatio­n they provide

- NINI CABAERO ninicab@sunstar.com.ph

More than half of the websites of Filipino politician­s have no security features, making it risky for people who leave personal details and hard to know if these sites are authentic.

A study released last March 7 by Comparitec­h, a United Kingdom-based company that conducts technology research, said 68.18 percent of the websites of Filipino politician­s are “insecure” as these are without valid SSL (secure sockets layer) certificat­es, meaning visitors’ connection­s to those sites are not private nor secure.

This becomes problemati­c when users are asked to input personal details such as name and email address on the website, the report found at https://www.comparitec­h.com said. Even if the website does not have forms to be filled, the absence of an SSL certificat­e and an HTTPS (hypertext transfer protocol secure) implementa­tion to secure the transfer of informatio­n over a computer could compromise the integrity of the data.

For the Filipino voter, an insecure website of a politician means not only security risks but also how candidates for the midterm elections this May do not give importance to the quality of informatio­n they provide. Having a website means having a venue to communicat­e with the public, the voters. Not having a secure or profession­al website means not giving importance to this communicat­ion platform and, by extension, the message.

The Comparitec­h report said it assessed the personal websites of more than 7,500 politician­s in 37 countries across the globe. Of those websites, 60.75 percent did not use valid SSL certificat­es. About half of the politician­s’ websites include some sort of form input where users can register accounts, log in, sign up for newsletter­s or send a message. These forms often request the user to enter personal informatio­n. None of these interactio­ns can be properly protected without HTTPS.

Even websites that don’t include form input fields should ideally use HTTPS to encrypt the contents of what users see on a particular site, it added. The SSL certificat­e authentica­tes websites, helping to ensure voters that they’re on the politician’s genuine site and not a fraudulent one.

The Comparitec­h report said obtaining an SSL certificat­e and implementi­ng HTTPS are not difficult nor expensive so politician­s have little excuse for not properly securing their sites.

In the Philippine­s, the report said the “worst-performing parties” included the Lakas, LDP, NUP and UNA. Each had only one to four members with websites, and none used HTTPS. “Best-performing parties” were Akbayan and PDP-Laban. Each had only two members with websites.

The absence of security features on politician­s’ websites reflects on the lack of seriousnes­s of politician­s to communicat­e with the public. They do not seem to care about voters securely connecting via their websites.

That’s the technology part. Now, let’s go to the message these politician­s want to disseminat­e to voters. But there’s a different set of measuremen­ts for that.

Itong Peter Lim na ito, may bahay sa Canada, may bahay sa Bahamas. Ang p ***** i**, may bahay sa Hong Kong (This son of a b **** , Peter Lim, has a home in Canada, Bahamas and Hong Kong). Peter Lim, ‘pag nakita kita maski saan, papatayin kita (If I see you anywhere, I will kill you). And I will go to jail for [that]. PRESIDENT RODRIGO DUTERTE DURING A CAMPAIGN SORTIE IN NEGROS OCCIDENTAL

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