Malware Removal Certificates

Standard, Wildcard, Multi Domain and EV SSL Certificates

MALWARE REMOVAL

Standard, Wildcard, Multi Domain and EV SSL Certificates

WEB INSPECTOR
STARTER

Monthly

$15

  • 50 Page Scanner / 1 Domain
  • Blacklist Monitoring
  • Daily Scan for Vulnerabilities
  • Check Against at Latest Malware

WEB INSPECTOR
PLUS

Monthly

$25

  • 250 Page Scanner / 1 Domain
  • Blacklist Monitoring
  • Daily Scan for Vulnerabilities
  • Check Against at Latest Malware

WEB INSPECTOR ENTERPRISE

Monthly

$60

  • 1000 Page Scanner / 1 Domain
  • Blacklist Monitoring
  • Daily Scan for Vulnerabilities
  • Check Against at Latest Malware

SSL FAQ’s

If you have questions that you do not have on the list, you can ask our Technical Support team.

SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) is the standard security technology for establishing an encrypted link between a web server and a browser. This link ensures that all data passed between the web server and browsers remain private and integral. SSL is an industry standard and is used by millions of websites in the protection of their online transactions with their customers.

CSR stands for Certificate Signing Request. A CSR contains information such your organization’s name, your domain name, and your location, and is filled out and submitted to a certificate authority such as hostmaxi.net. The information in a CSR is used to verify and create your SSL certificate. Most importantly, it also contains the public key that will be included in your certificate.

Organization Validation (or OV) certificates – also known as High Assurance certificates – are recognized to provide a higher standard in Internet trust. Ordering an hostmaxi.net High Assurance certificate gives visitors to your site an extra level of confidence in your web presence and your product. .

A Fully Qualified Domain Name (or FQDN) is a complete and unambiguous domain name that specifies an exact location for an object in a Domain Name System (DNS) hierarchy. It specifies all domain levels, including the top-level domain and the root zone. Most domain names as used in the internet’s Uniform Resource Locators (or URL) are only partially qualified (but work just fine).