Compare Chrome extensions: HTTPS Everywhere vs Nod - Reactions for Google Meet

Stats HTTPS Everywhere HTTPS Everywhere Nod - Reactions for Google Meet Nod - Reactions for Google Meet
User count 1,656,162+ 7,987,421+
Average rating 4.46 3.79
Rating count 4,278 334
Last updated 2022-09-30 2020-10-16
Size 1.77M 8.64M
Version 2022.5.24 2.5.5
Short description
Encrypt the Web! Automatically use HTTPS security on many sites. Quick emoji reactions for muted team members
Full summary

Note: Extension will sunset January 2023. Instructions on how to turn on HTTPS by default in Chrome here: https://eff.org/https-everywhere/set-https-default-your-browser

HTTPS Everywhere is an extension created by EFF and the Tor Project which automatically switches thousands of sites from insecure "http" to secure "https". It will protect you against many forms of surveillance and account hijacking, and some forms of censorship.

The DuckDuckGo Smarter Encryption list is publicly available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0. International license. If you'd like to license the list for commercial use, please reach out to: https://help.duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/company/contact-us/

Source code and bug tracker are available at https://github.com/efforg/https-everywhere. Please do not submit bug reports in the reviews!

Changelog: https://www.eff.org/files/Changelog.txt

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If HTTPS Everywhere causes a site to look weird or break, you can disable it for that site using the button in the address bar in the top right of your screen. HTTPS Everywhere for Chrome is currently in beta, and a few such issues are inevitable due to bugs in websites' HTTPS support. Also watch for a "shield" button in the address bar, which means that Chrome blocked insecure portions of the page. Sometimes pages will look weird with their insecure portions removed. Clicking on the shield will let you load them, but will reduce your security and privacy.

Special thanks to Aaron Swartz, Mike Perry, Jay Weisskopf, Nick Semenkovich, Jacob Hoffman-Andrews, Yan Zhu, Vijay P., and William Budington for their work on the Chrome port.

When running larger meetings in Google Meet, it can be difficult to gauge real-time feedback as you are speaking. Nod allows team members to send real-time reactions to presenters and speakers during meetings on Google Meet.

For more info: https://nod.rocks For updates and inquiries: https://twitter.com/jamiecio


PRIVACY POLICY https://nod.rocks/privacy