Este site está com funcionalidades limitadas enquanto realizamos manutenção para melhorar sua experiência de uso. Se nenhum artigo resolver seu problema e você quiser fazer uma pergunta, nossa comunidade de suporte pode te ajudar em @FirefoxSupport no Twitter e /r/firefox no Reddit.

Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

If the lock icon appears in the browser is it safe to assume that a PDF form will send my credit card information securely (over HTTPS)

  • 2 respostas
  • 1 tem este problema
  • 8 visualizações
  • Última resposta de DB

more options

If the lock icon appears in the browser is it safe to assume that a PDF form will send my credit card information securely (over HTTPS)? Or is the lock icon only relevant for HTML pages?

For that matter, does a lock icon also include the assurance that an HTML form will be posted securely?

If the lock icon appears in the browser is it safe to assume that a PDF form will send my credit card information securely (over HTTPS)? Or is the lock icon only relevant for HTML pages? For that matter, does a lock icon also include the assurance that an HTML form will be posted securely?

Todas as respostas (2)

more options

When you are on a secure page, and a form on the secure page is submitting to an insecure page, Firefox should display a warning and let you cancel the submit. (See attached.)

However, I don't know whether that applies to forms hosted in a plugin, such as Adobe Acrobat. I'm trying to think of a way to test that... (I do not have a version of Adobe that can create a PDF form)

Alterado por jscher2000 - Support Volunteer em

more options

It appears that the Adobe PDF plugin does not give any warning about sending form data to an unencrypted URL (even if it is loaded via HTTPS) https://dl.dropbox.com/u/892408/sample-form-1.pdf

Firefox's built-in PDF preview does not support forms (as of Firefox 19), so that isn't an option either.

However I did notice that if you save the form and open it in the Adobe Reader application (instead of the plugin) it shows a confirmation dialog before sending form data. The confirmation dialog displays the URL so you can look for HTTPS in the URL (but Adobe does not check the integrity of HTTPS certificate).

As best I can tell, PDF forms are not a secure method of submitting credit card information since there is no simple way for the user to independently verify that the form contents will be encrypted before sending.