Go to any financial institution’s website, then find the lock icon on your browser and click on it. Does anyone ever do that before typing in their credit card information when shopping online - click on the lock icon? Lock icons can be forged. By clicking on the icon instead of just relying on its presence to validate the vendor, you’ll see an SSL security report. My bank shows Verisign Class 3 Primary CA, identified the URL of the site itself and verified the site was encrypted.
All SSL certificates are NOT created equally.
As a vendor, if you purchase one of the less expensive SSL certificates, you will be able to use the lock icon. Validation of the vendor is the differentiation between the types of certificates issued.
VeriSign, Thawte or GeoTrust are solid choices for extended validation (EV) certificates. They’re more expensive, but highly recognizable (green) and trusted. The issue is (if you’re running eCommerce), to minimize abandoned shopping carts by converting more prospects. People buy from reps they know, like and trust. On the Internet, that trust level is your SSL certificate.
All SSL certificates are NOT created equally.
As a vendor, if you purchase one of the less expensive SSL certificates, you will be able to use the lock icon. Validation of the vendor is the differentiation between the types of certificates issued.
VeriSign, Thawte or GeoTrust are solid choices for extended validation (EV) certificates. They’re more expensive, but highly recognizable (green) and trusted. The issue is (if you’re running eCommerce), to minimize abandoned shopping carts by converting more prospects. People buy from reps they know, like and trust. On the Internet, that trust level is your SSL certificate.