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4 posts tagged with "Certificate"

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SSL Certificate Trends to Watch in 2026

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on June 20, 2026

SSL Certificate Trends to Watch in 2026

Shorter certificate lifetimes, more automation, and stricter browser expectations are shaping the current SSL certificate trends. If you run a business site, SaaS platform, agency stack, or customer portal, the main change is simple: certificates are becoming less of a yearly checkbox and more of an active operational process. The service can stay calm, but only if renewal, validation, and deployment are handled with less manual work.

This matters because the old habit of buying a certificate, installing it, and forgetting it for a year is fading out. Browsers, certificate authorities, and platform providers are pushing the ecosystem toward faster rotation, cleaner validation, and better visibility into what is deployed where. For teams managing one site, this is manageable. For teams managing fifty, it becomes an infrastructure issue very quickly.

Small Business SSL Guide That Keeps Sites Safe

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on June 10, 2026

Small Business SSL Guide That Keeps Sites Safe

Your website should already be serving HTTPS. If it is not, the browser is doing the customer support damage for you - usually with a warning screen and a little panic. This small business SSL guide is here to keep that from happening, and to make the setup clear enough that you do not need to become a certificate specialist just to run a store, agency site, or client portal.

SSL, more accurately TLS, is the certificate and encryption layer that proves visitors are talking to your real domain and not some strange middle point on the network. For a small business, that matters for three very practical reasons. First, customers trust the padlock and distrust warnings. Second, login forms, checkout pages, and contact submissions should never move in plain text. Third, search engines and modern browsers now treat HTTPS as normal operation, not some premium extra.

If your site already loads over HTTPS, that is good, but it is not the whole check. The certificate must be valid, renewed on time, installed on the correct hostname, and served with the full certificate chain. The logs are telling the same story on many support cases: the certificate exists, but the deployment is incomplete, the redirect is inconsistent, or one forgotten subdomain is still serving old config.

How to Set Up SSL Certificates Right

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on June 3, 2026

How to Set Up SSL Certificates Right

A working SSL setup is not just “install certificate and done.” The certificate must match the domain, the private key must stay on the correct server, DNS must point where you think it points, and your web server must present the right cert for the right hostname. If you are looking for how to set up SSL certificates without surprises at 2 a.m., this is the practical path.

Best SSL Certificate for Ecommerce Site Security

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on April 23, 2026

Best SSL Certificate for Ecommerce Site Security

A customer lands on your checkout page, sees a browser warning, and leaves before entering a card number. That is the real cost of choosing the wrong ssl certificate for ecommerce site security - not just a technical error, but lost revenue, damaged trust, and support headaches you did not need.

For ecommerce, SSL is not a nice extra. It is the baseline that protects logins, checkout forms, account pages, contact forms, and every session where customer data moves between browser and server. If your store handles payments, customer accounts, or any personal data at all, your certificate setup needs to be correct, current, and matched to how your site actually operates.

The good news is that most store owners do not need the most expensive certificate on the market. They need the right one, properly installed, renewed on time, and backed by infrastructure that does not leave them chasing alerts at midnight. That is a different conversation from simply asking, "Do I have HTTPS?"