maxbc wrote:
I use letsencrypt for my company (a tech company, no less), for anything from the front-facing commercial site to APIs, databases and online interfaces. It’s really amazing once you’ve figured out how to properly configure auto-renewal. I made the jump once I noticed that https://stackoverflow.com/ was relying on them.
I use it, too, for my website. It really is a case of configure and forget. (At least when the host system supports it which it does in my case. I use a Synology server.)
SSL side-debate is started :)
I use letsencrypt for my company (a tech company, no less), for anything from the front-facing commercial site to APIs, databases and online interfaces. It’s really amazing once you’ve figured out how to properly configure auto-renewal. I made the jump once I noticed that https://stackoverflow.com/ was relying on them.
I looked at going, but unfortunately have to be back on Monday morning for work, so won’t make it.
We are very happy to welcome you tomorrow 🙂
eurogaguest1980 wrote:
Looks like an excellent destination for this Sunday!
Looks like an excellent destination for this Sunday!
Or use Cloudflare, like EuroGA does. Free for nonprofit sites. And you don’t have the periodic pain of having to sort out the cron job which is supposed to renew the certificate and which for some reason has stopped.
https://letsencrypt.org/ is the place to get your free SSL/TLS certificate for any site you run
Thanks a lot Peter – it was a simple redirect-domain, that’s why I didn’t order an SSL certificate…
I’ve fixed the two links in the OP but the 2nd site has a server without a certificate, which nowadays just causes problems with browsers.