+mobile-l
Greetings. Rupert, an update!
The rebooted Android (Android 2.3+) and iOS (iOS 6+) apps will have
Wikipedia Zero flourishes built into them, making it possible for the user
to know whether the app access is free of data usage charges. The rebooted
apps are tentatively slated for store submission at the end of the month.
The flourishes will hinge on each operator's zero-rating of HTTPS.
Likewise, HTTPS contributory features are about to be introduced on the
Wikipedia Zero mobile web experience as well for operators that zero-rate
HTTPS.
WMF is starting the work with partner operators to add support for
zero-rating of HTTPS. There will be, at least, technical hurdles
(networking equipment architecture varies) in this transition, but it's
underway! Indeed, we have some carriers that have noted support for HTTPS
zero-rating already.
I'm very much grateful to Brion, Yuvi, and Monte for their assistance while
I added code to the Android and iOS platforms, and am happy to get to work
with them more while putting final touches in place this month. Props to
Faidon, Mark, and Brandon in Ops Engineering as well on helping us overcome
some rather non-trivial hurdles in order to retain good performance and
maintainability while adding HTTPS support.
-Adam
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 3:34 PM, Brion Vibber <bvibber(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 8:19 AM, Adam Baso
<abaso(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
Rupert, I saw your question regarding Wikipedia
Zero. Wikipedia Zero is
currently targeted for the mobile web, but I'll take this question back
to
the business team as to whether we'd be able
to support zero-rating of
apps
traffic at some point in the future, at least in
locales where moderate
bandwidth is available.
I think that once the zero-rating is switched to support HTTPS by using
IP-based instead of Deep Packet Inspection-based HTTP sniffing, ISP
partners wouldn't actually be able to distinguish between mobile web and
mobile apps content unless we actively choose to make them use separate IPs
and domain names.
Especially if, as we think we're going to, the future Wikipedia mobile app
will consist mostly of native code widgets and modules that plug into the
web site embedded in a web control... it'll be loading mostly the same web
pages from the same servers, but running a different mix of JavaScript.
-- brion
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