Thanks for the clarification. How can I find out more, specifically how the whole process would be accomplished, and what needs to be reconfigured. Are there tutorial links out there or is it more complicated than that? Their parent company does have their own secure web server, and were supposed to set up access for the non-profit a couple of years ago but it has fallen through the cracks. FYI, the parent company has very strict access policies so I don't know if that's standing in the way of their non-profit getting a secure access port on their server.
Richard P. On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 4:27 PM, Vicky Staubly <[email protected]> wrote: > On Tue, 22 Sep 2009, Richard P. wrote: >> >> A non-profit has a http website in which users are filling out >> personal and private form information, and the non-profit would like >> the get it secured with https. How can this be accomplished >> economically? Is the code difficult to write? > > There's no (new) code to write (unless the "http:" part of URLs > is in the existing code). All you need to do is buy an SSL Certificate > (many domain registrars can do it, e.g. Thawte, Network Solutions, > GoDaddy, etc.), and then install it on the web server. If they maintain > their own web server, there's a bit of configuration changes to do, > but nothing too complicated. > > -- > Vicky Staubly http://www.steeds.com/vicky/ [email protected] > > > ************************************************************************* > ** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy ** > ** policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/ ** > ************************************************************************* > ************************************************************************* ** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy ** ** policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/ ** *************************************************************************
