New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.
sslforfree.com alternatives ?
Hello,
i've been using sslforfree.com to generate free "lets encrypt" certificates for free , wildcard ssl ones for 90 days .
But now their service is become paid and they limited the free plan to 3 non wildcard SSLs .
Anyone know's any other free alternative which generates "lets encrypt" wildcard free for 90 days ?
Thanks !
Comments
Lets encrypt
DNS challenge - voila! Wildcard for free, from LE without a middleman.
hm. I've lost a machine.. literally lost. it responds to ping, it works completely, I just can't figure out where in my apartment it is.
Cloudflare is also offering free SSL
Yes but if stick your as** behind their DNS !
You can dl the certificate (doesn't require CDN option to be on)
How please ?
There are any disvantages of using CloudFlare cert on server and using full encryption option?
Reliable Providers: NIL
Gogetssl offers a free 90 day cert, I'm not sure if they're wildcards but they are easy to use.
I think this website would help you.
https://freessl.org/
yep . freessl.org
What prevent you from generating ssl using app such as certbot. You just need to download 1 file, run it, certificate is generated.
Cloudflare is also offering free SSL
An Switzerland - Offshore VPS from 10$(WMZ/Coins/PP/Qiwi) - Affi!.
>
You can try Parsslio. It's an alternative to SSLForFree
I dont know why some people using third party website to create a free Let's Encrypt cert. But i'd prefer using ACME to maintain my own Let's Encrypt. I do this with AWS free tier cloud.
ACME.SH with dns validation for wildcard certs.
Another alternative (but it's limited for 3 certificate / account)
https://zerossl.com
It's ACME doesn't have any limit: https://zerossl.com/documentation/acme/
sslforfree uses zerossl to provide certificates
https://freessl.org/ is the best alternative to it.
Why would someone want to have their private key stored with any third party?
RIPE LIR: Contact me for ASN registrations/IPv6. No IPv4 space left.
Yes, it's true. I'm sorry. Previously it provided also 'Let's encrypt' certificates.
It's a working alternative:
https://gethttpsforfree.com
And it have a source on GitHub, so anyone can host it.