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-   -   Free SSL Certificates :) (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=126317)

goBigtime 04-18-2003 11:34 AM

Free SSL Certificates :)
 
www.freessl.com

Cooooooooool :thumbsup

AdultNex 04-18-2003 12:33 PM

It's free, but you get what you pay for.

Your clients will see this:

http://www.whichssl.org/images/conte...ca_warning.gif

Lensman 04-18-2003 12:35 PM

Ouch

sextoyking 04-18-2003 12:44 PM

Hi,

Goto http://www.rackshack.net and look on the right side of the page, and you will see $39.00 geotrust ssl certs I belive.

same certs you will buy from geotrust for 149.00 or something.

thanks

todd

AdultNex 04-18-2003 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by sextoyking
Hi,

Goto http://www.rackshack.net and look on the right side of the page, and you will see $39.00 geotrust ssl certs I belive.

same certs you will buy from geotrust for 149.00 or something.

thanks

todd

These are the best SSL certs you can get, for the price, nothing can beat it.

sextoyking 04-18-2003 12:50 PM

Yep, we use them on our stores with NP's at all.

and you get your quick ssl cert in about 10 minutes. Can't beat it at all :)

Once thawte got bought out by verisign, I said fuck them :))

iroc409 04-18-2003 12:58 PM

hrm.. gonna have to take a look at the freessl.. looking for that for a small site i'm working on, where i just need it to be a secure connection, not worried about who's seeing it. kick ass.

goBigtime 04-18-2003 01:28 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by AdultNex
It's free, but you get what you pay for.

Your clients will see this:

http://www.whichssl.org/images/conte...ca_warning.gif

Are you sure?



Ubiquity:
Ostensibly, this is the number of browsers which will recognize SSL certificates as valid. Browsers ?know? which certificates can be trusted because there is a list embedded within the browser software. Certificate authorities lobby browser-makers to include their certificates. As software changes, certificates get chained, SSL itself changes, old code gets left behind, and when presented with newer certificates older browsers may generate transaction errors.

Some vendors make lots of noise about ubiquity, in some cases, to distract buyers from other product deficiencies. There is precious little ?science? to determining these values, and really, anything over 95% will provide more than adequate acceptance. Very old browsers will always have a problem.



These free ones have 96% ubiquity, the thwate/versign/whatever ones have 99%. I'm guessing this means that some of the ANCIENT (4 in 100) browsers will pop up that screen, instead of the 1 in 100 from the others.


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