The frustrating point about a similar experience was...
You can support HTTP and the occasional knowledgeable person will suggest you should upgrade. Or you can force TLS with SSLv3 enabled, and suddenly you'll hit a flood of people letting you know you're about to be hacked, based on online scanners. Often complete with requests for a bug bounty.
You can support HTTP and the occasional knowledgeable person will suggest you should upgrade. Or you can force TLS with SSLv3 enabled, and suddenly you'll hit a flood of people letting you know you're about to be hacked, based on online scanners. Often complete with requests for a bug bounty.