-** Wget now saves HTTP downloads using file names specified by the
-`Content-Disposition' header. This is a standard way of specifying the
-file name used by many web dynamically generated pages. For the time
-being, Content-Disposition is not used by default, to avoid the extra
-round-trips incurred (must specify "-e contentdisposition=yes"); this
-may change in a future version.
-
-** The GnuTLS library is now also experimentally supported for https
-downloads. This is still work-in-progress. OpenSSL is still used by
-default; use --with-ssl=gnutls to build with GnuTLS. OpenSSL is still
-required for NTLM authorization to work, but this should eventually
-change. NOTE: Certificate verification is _not_ currently supported:
-this means that you can currently only use GnuTLS to encrypt
-connections, but _not_ to verify that a host is who it claims to be. Use
-of OpenSSL is suggested until this missing feature is implemented.
+** Wget now supports saving HTTP downloads using file names specified by
+the `Content-Disposition' header. This is a standard way of specifying
+the file name used by many web dynamically generated pages. However, the
+current implementation is inefficient, and known to have bugs. It is
+EXPERIMENTAL only, and not enabled by default. Use --content-disposition
+to enable it.