Lisa
Well-known member
Like what... ninjas?I demoted all my moderators (again) because I feel like if we're going to use SSL and an E-Shop, the site becomes more business-like and will not need more moderators, but something else entirely.
Like what... ninjas?I demoted all my moderators (again) because I feel like if we're going to use SSL and an E-Shop, the site becomes more business-like and will not need more moderators, but something else entirely.
Hello,SSL can cause you a problem if your serving an advertisement that doesn't support https.
Just use the protocol independent URL in your Adsense code //). It works no matter what they say.Hello,
Thanks for your email. We’re sorry to hear that you're experiencing difficulties with your AdSense ads. We've provided some information below which we hope will address your question:
1. Ads are placed on an IP address URL or a page protected by Secure Socket Layer (SSL).
We do not serve ads to IP URLs or pages protected by SSL. Example IP URLs are: http://127.0.0.1/myhome.php or http://[2001:db8:0:1]:80. You can identify a page protected by SSL if the URL starts with "https://" instead of "http://".
Huh?Just use the protocol independent URL in your Adsense code //). It works no matter what they say.
Examle for adsense.Huh?
<script type="text/javascript"><!--
google_ad_client = "ca-pub-xxxxxxxxxxxx";
/* sample */
google_ad_slot = "xxxxxxxxxxx";
google_ad_width = 250;
google_ad_height = 250;
//-->
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js">
</script>
What do you use it for?
Last I checked they don't offer an SSL version, so it'll just fall back to http. Google wont offer an SSL version of Adsense any time soon - it'd cause too many heavy load issues on the servers.But I don't recommend doing this.
As I don't see any documentation that Google Adsense allow it.
Do you use advertisement networks at all?Everything if you give a damn about your security
I've got a browser plugin installed that forces the browser to use SSL versions of sites if available. The only time you probably don't need to worry about SSL is if there is no user input being done, as thats its big advantage. For forums there is no excuse for not offering it IMO. It's not like it costs a lot.
Yep. On the sites that I use SSL I obviously give the option not to use SSL for those who've not got the ability to disable the warning on their browser. I generally default the site to http in that case. I do have a few sites that don't use SSL but I always use it on my larger ones, where user input is taking place - ads still work fine, just older browsers (and IE) start having a fit about how you're about to kill a dolphin by allowing an invalid certificate.Do you use advertisement networks at all?
Login credentials are more or less transmitted with every request via a cookie (how do you think the "stay logged in" option works?)...That all sounds complicated. Why don't I just use it for the login screen instead?
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