How SafeSiteScan Scores Your Site (And What to Fix First)
Your score is a simple way to prioritize fixes. Here’s how scoring works and what usually moves the number fast.
Short, practical posts to help you protect trust and catch issues early.
Your score is a simple way to prioritize fixes. Here’s how scoring works and what usually moves the number fast.
Visitors decide if they trust your website in seconds. Security is one of the biggest trust signals, even when people can’t explain why.
If your domain expires, your website and email can stop working. In the worst case, someone else can buy your domain.
A one-time scan is helpful, but websites change. A simple scanning schedule helps you catch problems early.
A man-in-the-middle attack intercepts traffic between a user and a website. HTTPS makes interception much harder.
Multiple redirects add delay. That delay can hurt SEO, conversions, and user trust—especially on mobile connections.
Status codes tell you what happened when someone tried to load your site. They also reveal redirect problems and server failures.
DNS updates do not happen instantly. Propagation is the time it takes for record changes to spread across the internet.
Most site owners only notice outages after they lose leads. Uptime monitoring gives you early warning so you can fix problems fast.
Security headers are browser instructions that reduce risk. They help prevent clickjacking, unsafe loading behavior, and some script-based attacks.
An expired SSL certificate can trigger browser warnings that scare off visitors immediately. Here’s what to expect and how to prevent it.
SSL encrypts data between the browser and your site. That’s critical, but it isn’t the same thing as “my site can’t be hacked.”