Free SSL Certificates On IIS With LetsEncrypt โ๏ธ
LetsEncrypt is operated by the Internet Security Research Group (ISRG), and is a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project, which is also responsible for the Linux operating system and Nodejs among other projects. ๐
LetsEncrypt is supported by a range of organisations including Mozilla, Chrome, Akamai and Facebook. ๐ค๐ป
The certificates that LetsEncrypt issues are recognised by all major browsers, which results in the familiar padlock symbol being displayed on properly secured sites. ๐
This tutorial shows how to use LetsEncrypt with IIS. ๐
https://t.me/pgimg/42
[ Tutorial ] : http://bit.do/lenc
ใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐ
#LetsEncrypt #SSL
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LetsEncrypt is operated by the Internet Security Research Group (ISRG), and is a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project, which is also responsible for the Linux operating system and Nodejs among other projects. ๐
LetsEncrypt is supported by a range of organisations including Mozilla, Chrome, Akamai and Facebook. ๐ค๐ป
The certificates that LetsEncrypt issues are recognised by all major browsers, which results in the familiar padlock symbol being displayed on properly secured sites. ๐
This tutorial shows how to use LetsEncrypt with IIS. ๐
https://t.me/pgimg/42
[ Tutorial ] : http://bit.do/lenc
ใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐใฐ
#LetsEncrypt #SSL
@ProgrammingTip
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Add HTTPS To Any Site For Free ๐
Back in the old days, adding HTTPS/SSL/TLS to secure a web site was a big deal. ๐งฎ
You had to spend hundreds of dollars for a certificate, then install it on the web server. ๐ฅ
It had to be specific to the subdomain you were using, or you had to shell out even more bucks for the wildcard cert. And theyโd expire sometimes, and your site would go down, and that was never fun.๐ ๐ปโโ๏ธ
Times have changed.โ๏ธ
Yes, you can still do things the old way, and there are some advantages to doing so.โ๏ธ
But HTTPS is expected now. Google actively penalizes sites that donโt support it. Browsers are quick to tell you about โNot Secureโ sites you visit.โ ๏ธ
So, if you have a smaller site, like a blog, that you want to secure but you havenโt because itโs traditionally been a huge hassle and some expense to support HTTPS, youโre going to love CloudFlare.โจ
[ Article ] : bit.do/frehttps
ใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธ
#HTTPS #SSL #CloudFlare
@ProgrammingTip
Back in the old days, adding HTTPS/SSL/TLS to secure a web site was a big deal. ๐งฎ
You had to spend hundreds of dollars for a certificate, then install it on the web server. ๐ฅ
It had to be specific to the subdomain you were using, or you had to shell out even more bucks for the wildcard cert. And theyโd expire sometimes, and your site would go down, and that was never fun.๐ ๐ปโโ๏ธ
Times have changed.โ๏ธ
Yes, you can still do things the old way, and there are some advantages to doing so.โ๏ธ
But HTTPS is expected now. Google actively penalizes sites that donโt support it. Browsers are quick to tell you about โNot Secureโ sites you visit.โ ๏ธ
So, if you have a smaller site, like a blog, that you want to secure but you havenโt because itโs traditionally been a huge hassle and some expense to support HTTPS, youโre going to love CloudFlare.โจ
[ Article ] : bit.do/frehttps
ใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธใฐ๏ธ
#HTTPS #SSL #CloudFlare
@ProgrammingTip
Telegram
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