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Comodo EV SSL Certificate - $52.59 @ SSL Trust (Like/Share/Tweet Required)

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Our old special of the PositiveSSL upgrade to EV Green Bar SSL was discontinued a few months ago.
But we are able to offer a new similar offer, with the InstantSSL upgrade to EV Green Bar SSL from Comodo.

For anyone wishing to get their first EV ( Green Address Bar ) SSL Certificate.
You can obtain the EV SSL for this special price by purchasing the Comodo InstantSSL from the URL provided, once ordered and you configure your SSL it will be submitted automatically to Comodo for an Upgrade to a full EV Green Bar SSL.

An EV SSL is better then the standard SSL as it shows your complete business/entity name in the URL so visitors know who they are dealing with and know your business has been verified by a 3rd party. Visit our own website to see an EV SSL in action.

Please read the conditions on the provided page to make sure you are eligible for an EV SSL.

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closed Comments

  • -1

    cheapssl.com

    same thing, cheaper price

    • Just wondering, how do you unlock cheaper EV SSL on cheapssl.com?

      EV SSL is showing $101.49/yr on cheapssl.com

    • +1

      cheapest EV SSL i see on there is $101.49 USD.
      please backup the statement you have made.

  • +1

    Why do people want EV certs? Does the public care so long as they don't get a warning msg in their browser?

    But $53/yr is cheap. Is it once off or recurring?

    • If a website has an EV Cert you will see their registered business name and details.
      Anyone can get a standard SSL, but if you have a business/EV SSL that proves you are a registered business and your business/entity details have been verified as established and correct.
      It is also good as no one will be able to fake your business details in the EV cert, so you can can provide proof through the EV SSL that you are indeed who you say you are and not someone else pretending to be your business. They will see your business name in the green address bar.

      • Sorry I know what it offers, but my point is does anyone outside IT security people actually care? It's a bit like carrying around 100 points of ID. Your drivers lic is enough even for the cops

        it's a great price.

  • +1

    Why not just use lets encrypt for free?

    • +1

      +1 I agree, but I think not enough people are aware of this company.

    • +2

      lets encrypt does not have wildcard certificates, multi-domain SAN certificates, business certificates, extended validation certificates.
      they are very limited and only offer domain validated SSL that anyone can get.
      So if you are a business and wanted to have an SSL to show you are an established and verified registered business then lets encrypt will not work for you.
      If you are just needing to secure your own little personal website or blog then lets encrypt will work for you.

      • +1

        While mostly correct Lets Encrypt does support multi-domain SAN certificates. I use them for my personal web pages, but having a wildcard or EV is quite useful for businesses.

      • Let's be honest here, for the majority of business websites, a standard SSL is more than sufficient, and 100% better than not having one.

        There's a place for EV SSL, sure, but don't try and market this as a "business must use" certificate, because it's not.

        • I was of the same opinion earlier in the year.

          I remember the days even my web mail providers did not use SSL, and my very first VoIP provider used a self-signed SSL for their billing system. Oh, websites were using query strings to submit passwords, and user groups (access rights) were stored in a browser cookie for many forums.

          Recently, I received two scam emails in my company mailbox telling me my password was expiring, and I should reset it using "XYZ" (our internal identity manager). I don't even know how the scammers managed to know the name of our internal system. And, yes, that URL was "companyname-XYZsupport.co" with a valid SSL (domain verified). (I know it's definitely a fake because our identity manager is only hosted internally.)

          EV certs are now much more accessible than a few years ago. When I ordered EV certs for my last employer, it was about $1,420 per device per FQDN (ex-GST). (Yes, that was VeriSign.)

          Nowadays, I would say any reasonably sized business should go beyond domain validation. That doesn't necessarily mean they should get extended validation but why not if it is quite cheap.

          It also comes with marketing benefits considering the potential positive customer impression. :)

  • +1

    I used SSL Trust recently for a business and I would definitely use them again. They provided great before and after customer serivce, and were fast with the turn around of the certificates.

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