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3 posts tagged with "Certificate Management"

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SSL vs Wildcard Certificate: Which Fits?

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on July 3, 2026

SSL vs Wildcard Certificate: Which Fits?

You do not choose between security and security here. In the ssl vs wildcard certificate question, both options encrypt traffic and prove the site identity. The real difference is scope, management overhead, and how much future subdomain growth you expect. If the hostname plan is stable, a standard SSL certificate is often the cleaner tool. If subdomains keep multiplying like rabbits after midnight, wildcard can save real time.

A lot of confusion starts with the wording. People say “SSL certificate” as the generic name for any website certificate, even though modern certificates use TLS. That is normal industry habit, and we will keep the term practical here.

Managed SSL vs Self Managed: Which Fits?

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on July 2, 2026

Managed SSL vs Self Managed: Which Fits?

A certificate problem rarely starts with encryption. It starts with a calendar reminder someone missed, a DNS record nobody wants to touch on Friday, or a load balancer serving the wrong chain after an otherwise normal deploy. That is where managed SSL vs self managed becomes a real business decision, not just a technical preference.

If your site, app, store, or client platform needs HTTPS to stay trustworthy and online, the difference comes down to who owns the operational burden. Both approaches can deliver valid encryption. The real split is in renewal handling, validation, monitoring, incident response, and how much risk your team wants to carry after business hours.

SSL Certificate Management Guide for Busy Teams

· 6 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on May 5, 2026

SSL Certificate Management Guide for Busy Teams

A certificate rarely causes trouble when it is installed. It causes trouble three months later, when no one remembers who requested it, where the private key lives, or which subdomain was left out. That is why an SSL certificate management guide matters more than the certificate itself. For most businesses, the real risk is not encryption failing. It is operations failing quietly until a renewal is missed, a service breaks, or customers start seeing browser warnings.

If you run client sites, SaaS apps, stores, or internal dashboards, certificate management is not a side task. It is part of uptime management. The good news is that it does not need to become a full-time job if you build a clean process from the start.