Lucian Constantin
CSO Senior Writer

WordPress.com turns on default encryption for hosted domains

news
Apr 11, 20162 mins

WordPress.com website owners who use custom domains will get free HTTPS with free certificates

Website hosting platform WordPress.com will automatically enable HTTPS for all the custom domain names that its users have associated with their websites.

Run by Automattic, WordPress.com allows users to easily create and manage websites based on the hugely popular WordPress content management system. Users of the free service get a subdomain under wordpress.com to use as an address for their website, but paid plans allow hosting a custom domain.

Implementing HTTPS for wordpress.com subdomains was fairly easy and Automattic did this in 2014. However, turning on encryption for hosted websites with custom domain names requires individual certificates for each of those domains, which posed management and cost-related problems.

The company managed to solve that issue by working with Let’s Encrypt, a new certificate authority that provides free SSL/TLS certificates and automates their deployment, configuration and renewal. Let’s Encrypt, which is run by a public-benefit corporation called the Internet Security Research Group, entered public beta at the beginning of December and has already issued over one million certificates.

“The Let’s Encrypt project gave us an efficient and automated way to provide SSL certificates for a large number of domains,” said Barry Abrahamson, systems engineer at Automattic, in a blog post. “We launched the first batch of certificates in January 2016 and immediately started working with Let’s Encrypt to make the process smoother for our massive and growing list of domains.”

WordPress.com joins other large services that provide website owners with the ability to enable HTTPS for free. CloudFlare has been providing HTTPS with free certificates for all websites that use its security service since 2014 and Plex enabled users to protect their media servers with HTTPS since June 2015.

Lucian Constantin

Lucian Constantin writes about information security, privacy, and data protection for CSO. Before joining CSO in 2019, Lucian was a freelance writer for VICE Motherboard, Security Boulevard, Forbes, and The New Stack. Earlier in his career, he was an information security correspondent for the IDG News Service and Information security news editor for Softpedia.

Before he became a journalist, Lucian worked as a system and network administrator. He enjoys attending security conferences and delving into interesting research papers. He lives and works in Romania.

You can reach him at lucian_constantin@foundryco.com or @lconstantin on X. For encrypted email, his PGP key's fingerprint is: 7A66 4901 5CDA 844E 8C6D 04D5 2BB4 6332 FC52 6D42

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