At TransIP you can easily create your own website with, for example, WordPress or Joomla! You can of course also choose to build your website yourself.
Whatever you choose, it is important that your website is properly secured. This way you prevent malicious parties from misusing your website.
In this article we will give you some tips that will help you to make and keep your own website safe.
Update your website regularly
This is perhaps the most important tip we can give you. By keeping your website up-to-date, you prevent vulnerabilities of older versions of your website from being abused. It is recommended to check for updates to your website at least once a month.
If you notice that a plug-in, theme or extension has not been updated for more than 6 months, it is possible that support is no longer offered by its developers.
It is then recommended to look for an alternative. Below we give tips on selecting new plug-ins, themes and extensions.
Plugins, themes and extensions
There are thousands of plugins, themes (WordPress) and extensions (Joomla!) available for your website. These plugins, themes and extensions are supported by the WordPress and Joomla! checked and are therefore usually the most reliable to use.
Take a good look at the reviews that are written for this. Based on this, you can quickly see whether a plug-in, theme or extension works properly and meets your requirements.
If you want to use a paid plugin, theme or extension, that is also possible. Please note that you purchase these via the developer's website and not from any random website that they also offer (for free). The latter is more often than not too good to be true, leaving you with malware or other unsafe software.
Captchas
If you use a contact form or a login page on your website, we recommend using a so-called Captcha. A Captcha is a check to prevent bots. For example, you prevent an abundance of login attempts being made and your website becomes temporarily inaccessible. A captcha on contact forms prevents them from being used for spam purposes.
There are numerous plugins (WordPress) and extensions (Joomla!) available to secure your website with a Captcha. If you use a custom website, you can also use reCaptcha from Google.
Tips
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For Wordpress, you have the choice to use WordFence, a security plugin that already takes many tasks out of your hands when it comes to security. You can find these on the Wordpress website.
- Unfortunately there is no easy solution like Wordfence available for Joomla, but you can find extensive documentation of what you can do to make the website more secure in the Joomla manual. Although the steps for Joomla! are slightly more technical in nature than with WordPress, you can achieve the same result with this.
Secure your control panel
We recommend that you keep your TransIP control panel safe in addition to your website. Therefore, do not only secure your control panel with a strong password, but also enable 2FA for an extra layer of security.
My website is infected
If your website is already infected, especially if this has already happened several times, a normal update is often no longer sufficient to solve the problem. In this case, check whether you are not using outdated plugins or themes, as you have already read above.
A manual update may already solve some issues. See here for how to do this with Wordpress. Unfortunately, there are no manuals for Joomla or other CMSs yet.
If even this doesn't solve the problem, we recommend restoring a backup of your website. If your website is hosted on one of our web hosting packages, you have free access to 30 backups over a 10-day period in the past.
You can read how to easily restore these backups in the article 'How do I use webhosting backups?'. Then make sure you choose a backup from a time when your website was still clean.
If updating your website or restoring a backup doesn't help, you can consider rebuilding your website from scratch as a last resort.
This can take a lot of time, but is ultimately the safest option to remove an infection with rogue files. Also check with a virus scanner whether your own PC does not contain any vulnerabilities.