Jump to content

Wikipedia:Google https links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Wikid77 (talk | contribs) at 21:03, 7 May 2013 (listed 47 more and 1 template; listed category pages; re-sorted as numbered lists). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

This essay, wp:Google https links, describes the links in Google Search which have used the "https:" prefix (rather than "http:") to connect to Wikipedia pages by secure-server, SSL Internet protocol.

The following Wikipedia pages have been listed in Google with "https:" links:

  1. Acute (medicine) -
  2. Alan Turing - 21 April 2013, pageviews drop 65%
  3. Andean Geology -
  4. Astronomy & Geophysics -
  5. Astronomische Nachrichten -
  6. Astrophotography -
  7. Astrophysical maser -
  8. Brachytherapy -
  9. Cancer (disambiguation) -
  10. Cancer - 29 March 2013, pageviews drop 66%
  11. Cancer stem cell -
  12. Cancer survivor - 22 April 2013, pageviews drop 66%
  13. Cancer vaccine - 26 March 2013, pageviews drop 57%
  14. Cancer of unknown primary origin -
  15. Carcinogenesis -
  16. Cholangiocarcinoma -
  17. David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA -
  18. Depression (mood) - 21 April 2013, pageviews drop 66%
  19. Dispersion (geology) -
  20. Epoch (astronomy) -
  21. Equatorium -
  22. European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition -
  23. Explorer 49 -
  24. Extragalactic astronomy -
  25. Facies -
  26. Far-infrared astronomy -
  27. Geology -
  28. Geology of Alabama -
  29. Geology of Colombia -
  30. Geology of Oklahoma -
  31. Geology of West Virginia -
  32. Gerard Kuiper -
  33. Gone with the Wind (film) - late March 2013, pageviews drop 62%
  34. Head (geology) -
  35. Hong Kong College of Medicine for Chinese -
  36. Humorism -
  37. Hyperbola - 27 April 2013, pageviews drop 66%
  38. Imperial College School of Medicine -
  39. Infrared astronomy -
  40. Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics -
  41. Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge -
  42. International Journal of Cancer -
  43. International Year of Astronomy -
  44. Irish Cancer Society -
  45. Kampo -
  46. Karst -
  47. List of astronomical catalogues -
  48. List of best-selling books - late March 2013, pageviews drop 75%
  49. Locality (astronomy) -
  50. Mantle (geology) -
  51. Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy -
  52. Nanomedicine -
  53. National Geology and Mining Service -
  54. New York Academy of Medicine -
  55. Organ transplantation -
  56. Osteopathic manipulative medicine -
  57. Outline of astronomy -
  58. Outline of medicine -
  59. Parabola - late March 2013, pageviews drop 75%
  60. Patronage in astronomy -
  61. Peak District -
  62. Preventive medicine -
  63. Prime Minister of Australia - 2013?, no pageviews drop yet
  64. Prostate cancer screening -
  65. Psychosomatic medicine -
  66. Redshift -
  67. Rock of Gibraltar -
  68. Schizophrenia - 21 April 2013, pageviews drop 66% to 4,622/day
  69. Skin Cancer Foundation -
  70. Small Astronomy Satellite 2 -
  71. Specialty (medicine) -
  72. Squamous-cell carcinoma -
  73. Star -
  74. Nicolas Steno -
  75. Subaru Telescope -
  76. Tertiary -
  77. The New England Journal of Medicine -
  78. Transit (astronomy) -
  79. Ulugh Beg -
  80. United States National Library of Medicine -
  81. University of Aberdeen School of Medicine -
  82. University of Missouri School of Medicine -

Category pages:

  1. Category:Astronomical sub-disciplines -
  2. Category:Astronomy -
  3. Category:WikiProject Geology members -

Project pages:

  1. Wikipedia:WikiProject Astronomy -
  2. Wikipedia:WikiProject Geology -
  3. Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Geology/Meteorites -

Template pages:

  1. Template:WikiProject Alternative medicine -
  2. Template:WikiProject Astronomy/class -

As discussed about other pages since early April 2013, those articles (such as "Depression (mood)") have also changed in Google to have secure-server, https-prefix links, rather than typical "http:" prefix, as happened to several other articles in March 2013 ("Parabola" or "List of best-selling books" etc.). Although developers think the https-protocol requests have been properly logged, for pageview counts, some people think the pageview counts are still not correct (as perhaps undercounting the https transactions in those log files), while other people think that https security certificate alerts, in some browsers (such as MSIE not Firefox), have deterred people from viewing those articles, once their browsers ask about the secure-server access, and hence think the 66%-lower pageviews indicate actual reduction in readers viewing those pages. The reduced pageviews are shown by both stats.grok.se and the German Wiki-tech displays of pageview counts (such as for one-month option "&Zeitraum=1M").

See also

  1. HTTP Secure