> or even worse, your ISP-provided router or decade old middleware router on the Internet.
I can guarantee you that middleware will continue to exist. If they need to they'll force QUIC connections to terminate and switch to TLS 1.3. There's no way that companies will allow encrypted communications leaving their companies en-masse without being able to decrypt the content. Even more so for any totalitarian state governments that need to spy on their citizens..
> There's no way that companies will allow encrypted communications leaving their companies en-masse without being able to decrypt the content.
Then they'll install MITM certificates on the individual endpoints that they already control. The ability to intercept connections between endpoints is inexorably going away.
I can guarantee you that middleware will continue to exist. If they need to they'll force QUIC connections to terminate and switch to TLS 1.3. There's no way that companies will allow encrypted communications leaving their companies en-masse without being able to decrypt the content. Even more so for any totalitarian state governments that need to spy on their citizens..