SSL Certificates

He has: 1 posts

Joined: Sep 2007

Hello this is my first post. I am hoping to get some decent response to this and I am aware that there may be other similar questions, so links to other web sites and private messages are welcome! This is sort of a two part question.

First, I have been tasked with renewing our existing SSL Certificate for our web mail site. I have many questions regarding this. One is whether it is worthwhile to have this EV SSL Certificate, which is significantly more expensive than regular SSL Certs are.

Our current 3rd party CA is RapidSSL. I have heard good things about them but am supposed to look at other companies before making a decision. Any recommendations on either a different company or whether to pursue EV for even more confidence in our site would be the first thing I am looking for.

The second part is really how do I find the Certificate on my web server? What might it look like or be called? How do I generate the info on renewing it or will I get decent instructions on how to do this? I don't want to screw this up as I've heard if I make a mistake it is likely that I'll have to go back and spend all the money again! That would not be good.

I appreciate your help and look forward to checking in and helping where I can. This seems like a good forum.

Finntroll's picture

They have: 135 posts

Joined: Sep 2006

Though there are a large number of entities selling secure certificates, there are primarily 6 major SSL certificate providers. Whoever you purchase your SSL certificate from will most likely be either one of these 6 or a reseller for one of them. All 6 have 128 bit key encryption.

The primary SSL certificate providers are:

Verisign
Thawte
InstantSSL
Entrust
Baltimore
Geotrust
To get more detailed info about each of them, go to http://www.ourshop.com/resources/ssl-recommendation.html

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tummy's picture

They have: 121 posts

Joined: Mar 2007

You may have SSL certificate from the company that has it on their web site. For example,Namecheap.com offer SSL certificate starting from $12.88. This company is well-known and teir services can be trusted.

DavidVilia's picture

They have: 86 posts

Joined: Dec 2006

Yes NameCheap.com do offer SSL certificates. They are resellers and they are selling SSL from other biggest producers of SSL. I think that it is ok buy SSL from namechep.com, because if you buy it directly it is more expensive.

They have: 112 posts

Joined: Sep 2006

You can also get SSL certificates from ahosting.biz, they also resell SSL certificates https://www.securepaynet.net/gdshop/ssl/ssl.asp?prog%5Fid=256664

Freedom's picture

They have: 110 posts

Joined: Oct 2006

demopaul;224378 wrote: You can also get SSL certificates from ahosting.biz, they also resell SSL certificates https://www.securepaynet.net/gdshop/ssl/ssl.asp?prog%5Fid=256664

Right, moreover Ahosting.biz certificate fearures are:

Quote: All Ahosting Ltd.Co. SSL Certificates:
Are Affordable –
Provide Warranty Information.
Are based on virtually unbreakable 128-bit and high grade 256-bit encryption.
Offer 99% browser recognition.
Are supported live, 24/7, by our expert staff.
Do not rely on third parties for their Public Key Infrastructure; our Certificate Authority owns its Trusted Root.

But I didn't find who they have reselled from.

Smp Business Hosting's picture

They have: 60 posts

Joined: Aug 2007

I know a lot of people who are happy with namecheap's ssl cert's.

Freedom: ahosting.biz is reselling cert's and domains via Godaddy.

Regards, Steve

They have: 95 posts

Joined: Nov 2006

Smp Business Hosting;224531 wrote: I know a lot of people who are happy with namecheap's ssl cert's.

Freedom: ahosting.biz is reselling cert's and domains via Godaddy.

Regards, Steve

Does it make ahosting.biz certs more expensive?
I guess godaddy should be reselling from someone as well.

I think namecheap.com offer is enticing.
http://www.namecheap.com/learn/other-services/ssl-certificates.asp?from=index&link=learnmore

Do not click my links - this might be damage your PC.

Smp Business Hosting's picture

They have: 60 posts

Joined: Aug 2007

nice&easy;224595 wrote: Does it make ahosting.biz certs more expensive?
I guess godaddy should be reselling from someone as well.

It certainly costs a lot more to buy a cert from ahosting than it does Godaddy.

Regards, Steve

Musson's picture

They have: 100 posts

Joined: Dec 2006

Smp Business Hosting;224622 wrote: It certainly costs a lot more to buy a cert from ahosting than it does Godaddy.

Regards, Steve

Any data behind your statement? I'm just curious. As usuallty resellers buy SSL certs in bulk from their upsream provider, which makes the price difference minimal.
Also what's the difference between certs offered on ahosting.biz site:
Turbo SSL® Certificate
High-Assurance Certificate
Extended Validation Certificate???

Smp Business Hosting's picture

They have: 60 posts

Joined: Aug 2007

Musson;224910 wrote: Any data behind your statement? I'm just curious. As usuallty resellers buy SSL certs in bulk from their upsream provider, which makes the price difference minimal.
Also what's the difference between certs offered on ahosting.biz site:
Turbo SSL® Certificate
High-Assurance Certificate
Extended Validation Certificate???

Godaddy's SSL's
https://www.godaddy.com/gdshop/ssl/ssl.asp?ci=8979

Ahosting's SSL's
https://www.securepaynet.net/gdshop/ssl/ssl.asp?prog_id=256664&ci=1789&

You’ll notice that it's the same cert’s yet Godaddy charges $17.99 for their basic compared to Ahosting that charges $55.90.

Ahosting is using Godaddy's reseller api, all they do is sit back and take the profit. Godaddy receives the orders and processes them, provides support and everything else, and then ahosting will receive a check for all the sales that went through the site (obviously Godaddy takes out their share). So they don't by in bulk.

With regards to the difference; the big difference is the level of assurance to the site viewer, with the later cert the company buying the cert has to go through a much more vigorous process in order to be validated in comparison to the first cert where they only do a domain check.

Regards, Steve

247SiteAlert's picture

They have: 18 posts

Joined: Oct 2007

Musson;224910 wrote: Any data behind your statement? I'm just curious. As usuallty resellers buy SSL certs in bulk from their upsream provider, which makes the price difference minimal.
Also what's the difference between certs offered on ahosting.biz site:
Turbo SSL® Certificate
High-Assurance Certificate
Extended Validation Certificate???

SSL's all do basically the same thing: encrypt the data between the server and the browser - so why spend more money than necessary? I use a Turbo SSL Cert on one of my sites, I paid 19.95 and it's been fine.

Free Website Uptime Monitoring
http://www.247SiteAlert.com

akopayan's picture

They have: 106 posts

Joined: Nov 2006

247SiteAlert;225276 wrote: SSL's all do basically the same thing: encrypt the data between the server and the browser - so why spend more money than necessary? I use a Turbo SSL Cert on one of my sites, I paid 19.95 and it's been fine.

Who do you use it fom? It seems you have used it from Namecheap.com. Right?

ohrana's picture

They have: 156 posts

Joined: Sep 2006

nice&easy;224595 wrote:
I think namecheap.com offer is enticing.
http://www.namecheap.com/learn/other-services/ssl-certificates.asp?from=index&link=learnmore

Naecheap.com offers RapidSSL is $14.88 when purchased for one year and just $12.88 when purchased for three years. Other certificates have lower price when purchased for more than one year.
What does RapidSSL mean?

They have: 4 posts

Joined: Oct 2007

As others have said, check out namecheap - they are quite good. There is a not a huge amount of difference (in terms of security) between most companies SSL certs, the main thing is more about how recognized they are.

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They have: 1 posts

Joined: Nov 2009

dln170 wrote:
Hello this is my first post. I am hoping to get some decent response to this and I am aware that there may be other similar questions, so links to other web sites and private messages are welcome! This is sort of a two part question.

First, I have been tasked with renewing our existing SSL Certificate for our web mail site. I have many questions regarding this. One is whether it is worthwhile to have this EV SSL Certificate, which is significantly more expensive than regular SSL Certs are.

Our current 3rd party CA is RapidSSL. I have heard good things about them but am supposed to look at other companies before making a decision. Any recommendations on either a different company or whether to pursue EV for even more confidence in our site would be the first thing I am looking for.

The second part is really how do I find the Certificate on my web server? What might it look like or be called? How do I generate the info on renewing it or will I get decent instructions on how to do this? I don't want to screw this up as I've heard if I make a mistake it is likely that I'll have to go back and spend all the money again! That would not be good.

I appreciate your help and look forward to checking in and helping where I can. This seems like a good forum.

I was surfing for buying SSL certificate for my site and I came across your thread I cant answer your all questions but your first question about is it worth going for EV certificate I would say yes I agree with you in price difference but I have a solution for that also when I was surfing I came across a site https://www.thesslstore.com they are providing Geotrust's True Business ID with EV certificate for just 174$ the lowest I suppose over internet I have surfed many sites for EV SSL and what I got is 249$, 399$ you can see the huge difference I thought you might be interested in knowing.

They have: 24 posts

Joined: Oct 2009

Thawte SSL certificate is for US$49, including free installation.

Please refer to the following link for more details:
http://www.thawte.com/ssl-digital-certificates/ssl123/index.html

It supports up to 256-bit encrypton.

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