Web Host News – Boston, MA – GMO GlobalSign inc, a specialist in SSL partner programs and security automation technologies, announced results of a survey revealing the challenges SSL resellers face, including an extremely competitive industry, an antiquated workflow, and increasingly complex hosting technical environments requiring flexible SSL technology.  The survey included responses from 240 SSL resellers from the United States and Europe.

The hosting industry is a very competitive market landscape with thousands of companies reselling SSL.  Gaining a competitive edge is extremely difficult, as indicated by the eighty percent of respondents who identified industry competition as the number one challenge to reselling SSL Certificates.  Adding to the challenge is the confusion that seems to surround SSL.  With seventy-five percent of respondents reporting difficulty marketing SSL and sixty-nine percent of respondents reporting a challenge explaining the value proposition, it is clear that customers are still unsure of SSL.  SSL providers, hosting companies, and the press need to continue explaining the significance and benefits of SSL via all channels.

Adding to the confusion surrounding SSL is the slow and error prone lifecycle, which hasn’t changed much since it was created in 1996.  Automation is consistently brought up within reselling circles as a solution to this problem.  when respondents were asked why they would consider implementing an automated solution, almost equal importance was placed on reducing time spent managing SSL and improving delivery speed to customers.  it is clear that both resellers and customers are feeling the consequences of the outdated SSL workflow.

“SSL should be a value-add for hosting companies.  Instead organizations end up spending valuable time and resources managing problems that arise with the current, antiquated SSL workflow,” said Steve Waite, Chief Marketing Officer, GlobalSign.  “It is time for SSL to join the 21st century and automation is the way to do it, which is why we’ve recently launched a revolutionary technology, OneClickSSL, which completely automates the SSL lifecycle, eliminating the support overhead for the reseller thus allowing organizations to focus on their core business and increase their SSL margins.”

A copy of the Hosting and SSL Reseller report will be released at HostingCon this week, visit booth #627 to pick up a copy or contact GlobalSign to view a copy of the report at press@globalsign.com.

For more information about GlobalSign’s OneClickSSL solution, please visit globalsign.com/ssl/oneclickssl or stop by booth 627 at HostingCon.

About GMO GlobalSignEstablished in 1996 and as a WebTrust accredited public certificate authority, GlobalSign offers publicly trusted SSL Certificates, EV SSL, Managed SSL Services, Code Signing for use on all platforms including mobile devices. its Trusted Root solution uses the widely embedded GlobalSign Root CA certificates to provide immediate PKI trust for Microsoft Certificate Services and internal PKI, eliminating the costs of using untrusted Root Certificates. its partnership with Adobe to provide Certified Document Services (CDS) enables secure digitally signed PDF documents, certified transcripts and e-invoices.  these core Digital Certificate solutions allow its thousands of authenticated customers to conduct secure online transactions, data transfer, distribution of tamper-proof code, and protection of online identities for secure email and access control.  The company has a history of innovation within the online security industry and has offices in the US, UK, Belgium, Japan, and China.

Research, evaluate and learn more about cloud hosting at FindMyHost.com.

this entry was posted on Tuesday, August 9th, 2011 at 11:07 am and is filed under Press Releases, Web Host News. you can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. you can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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In the latest study completed by Retrevo, 34 percent of iPhone owners are under the impression that the iPhone 4 and older Apple models are compatible with 4G service. It’s possible this confusion is attributed to the name of the iPhone 4. In addition, 24 percent of Blackberry owners are of the same mindset despite a lack of a 4G alternative from RIM. 29 percent of Android owners also thought …

Go here to read the rest:
One third of iPhone owners believe they already have 4G service

Last week, we reported on a controversy sparked by Apple’s inclusion of a screenshot of a third-party developer’s app interface in a patent application published late last month. While we noted at the time that the screenshot was used by Apple as interface example for taking advantage of Apple’s suggested travel information service and that the company was not trying to patent anything specific to the pre-existing application, questions still remained about Apple’s behavior in the matter.


Where To? screenshot (left) and drawing from Apple patent application (right)

The third-party developer in question, FutureTap, has posted an update revealing that it has received an explanation from Apple regarding the screenshot usage. Following on discussions between Apple and FutureTap, Apple’s patent attorney writes:

As discussed, Apple is contemplating steps to attribute the screenshot in the patent application to FutureTap. The patent application in question does not claim as inventive the pictured user interface nor the general concept of an integrated travel services application. We appreciate your taking time out to discuss the matter and will keep you updated.

FutureTap’s Ortwin Gentz notes that the explanation is clearly satisfactory, and while acknowledging that ignorance of patent law was the source of much of the confusion on the part of himself and others, sees the positive aspect of Apple’s inclusion of FutureTap’s screenshot in its application.

We feel honored over this mention and appreciate that Apple is looking into a proper attribution of the screenshot. In retrospective, I can say we wouldn’t ever have considered the story alarming had the screenshot included a short attribution notice.

In his defense, Gentz rhetorically asks with a sense of humor whether users would “prefer developers who love reading patents over the ones who love to design user interfaces”. (In the interest of full disclosure, Where To? was initially designed by developers John Casasanta and Sophia Teutschler at tap tap tap.)


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When the next iPhone comes around–I don’t know anyone who’s predicting a release date later than this July–AT&T presumably wants to avoid the confusion, bad publicity, and need for backpedaling that accompanied the 3G release. …

Originally posted here:
How Much are iPhone 3GS Owners Going to Pay For the Next iPhone?

When the next iPhone comes around–I don’t know anyone who’s predicting a release date later than this July–AT&T presumably wants to avoid the confusion, bad publicity, and need for backpedaling that accompanied the 3G release. …

See the article here:
How Much are iPhone 3GS Owners Going to Pay For the Next iPhone?