You’ve worked too hard to leave your code unprotected. As an independent developer or programmer, your code is your reputation. If your release is hacked, infected, or altered in any way, customers won’t trust you enough to give you a second chance. Protect yourself, your customers and your good name with the rock-solid security of a Code or Driver Signing Certificate.
What else keeps your site secure?
Secure your code and earn your customers’ trust.
Digitally Sign Device Drivers, Config Files, Macros & More; SHA-2 Encryption. Boost Search Rankings. 2048-bit Encryption. Guaranteed, Warrantied. 24/7 Technical Support. Secure Multiple Websites. Services: Domain Names, Web Hosting, Website Builder, Email Addresses, Web Securit
Our Driver Signing Certificates:
Approve your software for use on Windows® operating systems. A Driver Signing Certificate is required for all Microsoft® hardware drivers on Windows Vista® and Windows 7.
Authenticate the source and integrity of your hardware driver code.
Eliminate “Unidentified Publisher” warnings.
Inspire confidence from users by showing them your code is trustworthy.
Digitally sign software objects, device drivers, configuration files, macros, and more.
Secure your code and earn your customers’ trust.
Digitally Sign Objects, Drivers, Macros & More; SHA-2 Encryption, Secure Multiple Websites. 2048-bit Encryption. Guaranteed, Warrantied. 24/7 Technical Support. Boost Search Rankings. Services: Domain Names, Web Hosting, Website Builder, Email Addresses, Web Security..
Our Code Signing Certificates:
Authenticate the source and integrity of your code.
Eliminate “Unidentified Publisher” warnings.
Inspire confidence from users by showing them your code is trustworthy.
Digitally sign software objects, device drivers, configuration files, macros, and more.
Show customers they can trust your code by securing it with a unique digital signature.
Show customers they can trust your code by securing it with a unique digital signature.
Trust our code to protect yours.
Bad things can happen to your code when it’s distributed online. It can be hacked before it reaches the user, stolen by another developer, or just never get installed because the “Unidentified Publisher” warning scares off your customers. Fortunately, a Sliplink Network Code or Driver Signing Certificate makes it easy to protect your code — and your customers — from these and other issues.
Both certificates:
Secure your software with the same industry-standard encryption used for SSL certificates, making it impossible for others to alter your code.
Act as a digital ‘safety seal’ to show customers that your code has not been tampered with in any way.
Display your name or your company’s name, instead of “Unidentified Publisher,” during download and installation, so customers know you’re a legitimate developer.
Work with several types of files and languages, including .exe, .cab, .dll, .ocx, Java, HTML, ActiveX, even Microsoft® Office macros and any other file types that support digital signatures.
Include time-stamps so users know that your code went through the verification process, even if you allow the certificate to expire.
Driver signing:
Is required for all Microsoft® hardware drivers on Windows Vista® and Windows 7 Is designed specifically to protect and validate hardware drivers developed for Microsoft operating systems, Windows Vista or later.
Is verified through both Sliplink Network and Microsoft via cross-certificate validation, adding an extra level of security and assurance for your customers.
Sliplink Network Code and Driver Signing Certificates You’ve worked too hard to leave your code unprotected. As an independent developer or programmer, your code is your reputation. If your release is hacked, infected, or altered in any way, customers won’t trust you enough to give you a second chance. Protect yourself, your customers and your good name with the rock-solid security of a Code or Driver Signing Certificate.
What else keeps your site secure?
Frequently asked questions
What is a Code Signing Certificate?
With increasingly active content on the internet, end users require a method of verifying the legitimacy of downloadable web content.
Code signing is a digital signature placed on software and other executable files and scripts. Code signatures prove the identity of software authors and validates that the software hasn’t been tampered with since its original distribution.
Code signs don’t alter the software – it’s just an added layer of assurance for your end users.
When software is purchased from a store, it’s easy to tell who published the software – and if the package was tampered with. Unfortunately, these factors aren’t as obvious when software is purchased online. As a result, end users take on a certain amount of risk when downloading Java applets, plugins, Microsoft® ActiveX® controls, and other executables over the Internet.
Code Signing Certificates help inspire the same level of trust in your software that customers would have if they purchased your software in a store.
Improve your software security with a digital signature. Inspire user confidence by authenticating the source and integrity of your code with a Sliplink Network Code Signing Certificate.
For more information, see our Code Signing Certificate product support page.
Who needs a Code Signing Certificate?
Online security vigilance is at an all-time high. Most Web users won’t download software unless you can prove it’s legitimate. Code Signing Certificates inspire confidence and give you the proof you need to validate your code.
Software developers can use Code Signing Certificates to provide extra assurance to their customers about who produced the content and that it’s not tampered with. Signed code also prevents unidentified third parties from altering the code before it’s distributed.
Content publishers can digitally sign software components, macros, firmware images, virus updates, configuration files or other types of content for secure delivery over the Internet or other mechanisms.
Code signing is particularly important when the source of a given piece of code might not be obvious – for example Active X controls, Java applets, and other active web scripting codes.
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