WordPress security with Defender Pro

Easy-to-implement and hardened WordPress security with Defender Pro

Paintscape Designs

Your Website Partner

Included with our Managed Hosting accounts!

Hackers, brute forcers, and malicious bots are no match for Defender’s mighty WordPress security shields and cloaking technology. Arm your sites with:

  • Scheduled security scans
  • Login protection and masking
  • Audit Logging
  • Two-factor authentication
  • Blocklist monitoring
  • Vulnerability reports
  • Changed file restore and repair

Google strongly promoting HTTPS everywhere

From Google Webmaster Central Blog:

Indexing HTTPS pages by default

Posted: 17 Dec 2015 08:00 AM PST

At Google, user security has always been a top priority. Over the years, we’ve worked hard to promote a more secure web and to provide a better browsing experience for users. Gmail, Google search, and YouTube have had secure connections for some time, and we also started giving a slight ranking boost to HTTPS URLs in search results last year. Browsing the web should be a private experience between the user and the website, and must not be subject to eavesdropping, man-in-the-middle attacks, or data modification. This is why we’ve been strongly promoting HTTPS everywhere.

As a natural continuation of this, today we’d like to announce that we’re adjusting our indexing system to look for more HTTPS pages. Specifically, we’ll start crawling HTTPS equivalents of HTTP pages, even when the former are not linked to from any page. When two URLs from the same domain appear to have the same content but are served over different protocol schemes, we’ll typically choose to index the HTTPS URL if:

  • It doesn’t contain insecure dependencies.
  • It isn’t blocked from crawling by robots.txt.
  • It doesn’t redirect users to or through an insecure HTTP page.
  • It doesn’t have a rel=”canonical” link to the HTTP page.
  • It doesn’t contain a noindex robots meta tag.
  • It doesn’t have on-host outlinks to HTTP URLs.
  • The sitemaps lists the HTTPS URL, or doesn’t list the HTTP version of the URL
  • The server has a valid TLS certificate.

Although our systems prefer the HTTPS version by default, you can also make this clearer for other search engines by redirecting your HTTP site to your HTTPS version and by implementing the HSTS header on your server.