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Cheapest UCC Certs
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Cheapest UCC Certs

emilvemilv Member

Hello, anyone know where to get the cheapest UCC SSL Certs?

Thank you.

Comments

  • awsonawson Member
    edited July 2013
    • you can add up to 2000 additional hostnames for just 17$ each. No documents needed, issued within 3-5 minutes
    Thanked by 1Mahfuz_SS_EHL
  • @gogetssl Your site does not have a SSL certificate, why would someone buy from you?

  • @Bogdacutuu said:
    gogetssl Your site does not have a SSL certificate, why would someone buy from you?

    Maybe you should do your homework before jumping to conclusions.

    https://my.gogetssl.com/en/

  • DroidzoneDroidzone Member
    edited July 2013

    @Bogdacutuu said:
    https://www.gogetssl.com has a self-signed certificate.

    Does it matter, if they aren't using that address for anything? Their order form and customer login is at the address I posted, which has an EV.

    By navigating to https://gogetssl.com, you're probably accessing the internal certificate automatically installed by apache.

  • BogdacutuuBogdacutuu Member
    edited July 2013

    @joelgm said:

    I've seen SSL certificates as cheap as $2/year, there's really no reason for a SSL provider to skip on something so basic.

    I also just noticed that there's no site at all on https://. While this might invalidate my point, I still believe that they should at least have a certificate on their main site too.

  • DroidzoneDroidzone Member
    edited July 2013

    @Bogdacutuu said:
    I also just noticed that there's no site at all on https://. While this might invalidate my point, I still believe that they should at least have a certificate on their main site too.

    Some would argue that including SSL on the main site would hamper the speed. Not significantly, but it might still be there.

    SSL certs for $2 are simple domain validated ones. An extended validation cert of the sort used by Gogetssl is much, much costlier.

    I have an active cert from GogetSSL on one of my domains. Recently I replaced it with a $2 wildcard alphaSSL, but I love Gogetssl's site, especially the online CSR and key generation portal.

  • awsonawson Member

    @Bogdacutuu said:
    I also just noticed that there's no site at all on https://. While this might invalidate my point, I still believe that they should at least have a certificate on their main site too.

    Yes, because there's a need to, right?

    Not sure if you know what SSL is for.

  • Thank you joelgm for your comments :)

    Dear Bogdacutuu, the idea of SSL is to secure sensitive information, like contact forms, carts, order processing, emails and other connections, but there is no need to secure main website if there is nothing to be secured. In fact SSL slows down a connection, not much, but some 0.3s-0.9s can be lost.

    This is nothing for end users, but Google/Yandex/Bing use that in their search algorithms, if website is very slow, it will be very hard to get to TOP 10.

    We suggest to use gtmetrix.com website, to test and optimize your websites, if your score is at least >80%, then SSL speed not reflects on your website.

    Hope that information is usable for all.

  • @gogetssl It's really not necessary to use SSL for the main domain. However still you can keep SSL activated for the domain. So if anyone visit with https:// then they will see you have a SSL activated. I can see you only secure my.domain.com and let the primary domain self signed. To be honest as you are a SSL provider, using selfsigned yourself, just lol, no question here. I prefer you to put 1 bucks on it. Others site and your site is not same. A ssl provider using selfsigned, thats really funny.

  • @centriohost, if you will use both versions with and without SSL (HTTP/HTTPS), then every search engine will see it as 2 different websites, and as content will not be unique it will violates rules of Google/Bing.

    To fix it, you will need to use Robots to block https from indexing and some other things. SSL should be used, when its really needed. There is no order form on our website, so no need to install SSL and self-signed is just fine.

    Please think about more popular websites, like YouTube, even such big professionals like Google, doesn't use SSL protection for 100%, here is example:
    (screenshot http://screencast.com/t/xo7KhjNe)

    Every page with the Video has SSL installed, but 3rd party resources are not secured :)

    To avoid it, please always be sure your secured page doesn't have any HTTP connections

  • "I prefer you to put 1 bucks on it. Others site and your site is not same. A ssl provider using selfsigned, thats really funny."

    P.S. Self-signed SSL are not bad comparing to SSL certificates from known CA Vendors, the problem is trust and who signed it, technically there is no much difference. For example, almost none SSL providers offering SAN Wildcard SSL, but you can create your own self-signed SSL that will secure ..domain.com

    Trusted SSL means, that every devices and brands recognize it and trust it, so SSL vendors pay to every device developers and owners to trust the SSL. Your own self-signed SSL will works perfectly on every device/browsers, but you will get an error that SSL is not trusted, but that doesnt mean that data will not be encrypted ;)

  • @gogetssl That means MITM attacks would be so easy.

    See also: CNNIC cert.

  • ATHKATHK Member

    @gogetssl your site is down? I keep getting a 500 error... and https:// returns a page telling me to use normal http:// .. which I can't...

  • Biscuit1001Biscuit1001 Member
    edited August 2013

    Their site (gogetssl) is down again (a WHMCS db error), I can't get any sort of response on Twitter, and their presence on Facebook is a personal account one would have to "friend." The self-signed cert on their main site was a deal-killer for me, though.

    Both Facebook and Twitter use SSL/HTTPS exclusively. I would expect a company selling SSL certs would as well. I understand that it's a pain to configure everything so Google only indexes the HTTP site, but it can be done.

  • @centriohost ar you still offering wildcard alphaSSL for 2$? or it is revised to 10$?
    is this the link https://billing.centriohost.com/cart.php?gid=7.

    Is it the wildcard?

  • @nagug at 10$ at this moment.

  • I have been using GoGetSSL for the last months and it's extremely easy and fast to setup a SSL. Don't know if it's new, but i'm able to use their main website via https with a EV Validation from Comodo at this moment. :)

  • nagugnagug Member
    edited August 2013

    @CentrioHost said:
    nagug at 10$ at this moment.

    >

    its wild card?

  • @emilv said:
    Hello, anyone know where to get the cheapest UCC SSL Certs?

    Setting up an Exchange server?

  • @nagug Yes its AlphaSSL Wildcard.

    Thanked by 1hawks
  • @Raymii Yup, decided to get from candagainternet.com. $59/yr for 5 domains.

  • http://startssl.com/ is a cheapest UCC SSL Certs

  • @CentrioHost said:
    nagug Yes its AlphaSSL Wildcard.

    10$ for wildcard SSL is a bargain.

  • dj1812dj1812 Member
    edited December 2014

    https://www.ssl2buy.com/comodo-multi-domain-ssl.php

    1 year price $45 includes 4 domains.

    Additional SAN cost $15.

  • @dj1812 said:
    https://www.ssl2buy.com/comodo-multi-domain-ssl.php

    1 year price $45 includes 4 domains.

    Additional SAN cost $15.

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