What is an SSL Certificate and Why Should Care as a Business/Website Owner?

Ever wondered how to make a secure, encrypted connection with your website, and tell the browser who you are. This is where an SSL certificate from MyDot comes in. Your SSL certificate is a digital signature certifying that you own the website and connects you to the browser. This provides extra protection for both the user and the website owner, ensuring that your information is safe and secure.

When you visit a website that starts with https:// instead of http://, you are protected from eavesdropping. The "s" stands for secure. When you are on a website that has an SSL certificate, any communications between your browser and the server are encrypted.

It means someone who is monitoring your connection to the site will not be able to read or modify any information transmitted between the two points.

What are SSL Certificates and Why they are Important?

An SSL certificate, or Secure Sockets Layer Certificate, is a small data file that holds information about a website. SSL certificates allow users to encrypt the data they send to the site to make it more secure. This way, anyone else who intercepts the information will be unable to read it or steal it.

This protects you from having your password stolen by keyloggers or man-in-the-middle attacks. If you use online banking, eCommerce shopping, or even just personal data entry through an insecure connection, your data could easily be intercepted by hackers.

Having an SSL certificate from MyDot  when installed on your web server will add another layer of protection against these malicious attacks because it encrypts all of the data transferred between the server and your browser. Having an SSL certificate also helps protect against phishing attacks.

While anyone can see the address bar in your browser clearly shows https://, it's often hard to tell if a website is legitimate or not just by looking at the URL alone. If users do not take additional steps to verify that they are visiting their intended destination, they run the risk of having their passwords and other sensitive information stolen by phishing

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