Skip to toolbar

Community & Business Groups

Proposed Group: HTTPS in Local Network Community Group

The HTTPS in Local Network Community Group has been proposed by Tomoyuki Shimizu:


The HTTPS in Local Network Community Group (CG) explores the manner of secure communication between browsers and server-capable devices in local network such as set-top boxes, network attached storages, etc. We propose that this Community Group clarify requirements for browsers and devices in issuing valid certificates and establishment of HTTPS and WebSocket connections over TLS and incubate relevant specifications of APIs and/or network protocols.

This work has four primary purposes:

  • Improve security and privacy of communication between browsers and server-capable devices.
  • Enable web applications in secure contexts to communicate with server-capable devices in local network via XMLHttpRequest, Fetch API, and WebSocket.
  • Enable service discovery mechanisms to advertise existence of TLS-enabled server-capable devices.
  • Encourage adoption and implementation of the specification by browser vendors and device manufacturers.

Given wider support and adequate stability, we plan to migrate the proposals
generated in this Community Group to an appropriate standards track, for
example the IETF Standards Track or a W3C Working Group, for further
contributions and formal standardization.


You are invited to support the creation of this group. Once the group has a total of five supporters, it will be launched and people can join to begin work. In order to support the group, you will need a W3C account.

Once launched, the group will no longer be listed as “proposed”; it will be in the list of current groups.

If you believe that there is an issue with this group that requires the attention of the W3C staff, please send us email on site-comments@w3.org

Thank you,
W3C Community Development Team

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Before you comment here, note that this forum is moderated and your IP address is sent to Akismet, the plugin we use to mitigate spam comments.

*