diff --git a/Running-Friendica-with-SSL.md b/Running-Friendica-with-SSL.md index dcf2152..763c0e1 100644 --- a/Running-Friendica-with-SSL.md +++ b/Running-Friendica-with-SSL.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ If you are running your own Friendica site, you may want to use SSL (https) to e To do that on a domain of your own, you have to obtain a certificate from a trusted organization (so-called self-signed certificates that are popular among geeks don’t work very well with Friendica, because they can cause disturbances in other people's browsers). -If you are reading this document before actually installing Friendica, you might want to consider a very simple option: Go for a shared hosting account _without your own domain name_. That way, your address will be something like ``yourname.yourprovidersname.com``, which isn't very fancy compared to ``yourname.com``. But it will still be your very own site, and you will _usually_ be able to hitch a lift on your provider's SSL certificate. That means that you won't need to configure SSL at all - it will simply work out of the box. +If you are reading this document before actually installing Friendica, you might want to consider a very simple option: Go for a shared hosting account _without your own domain name_. That way, your address will be something like ``yourname.yourprovidersname.com``, which isn't very fancy compared to ``yourname.com``. But it will still be your very own site, and you will _usually_ be able to hitch a lift on your provider's SSL certificate. That means that you won't need to configure SSL at all - it will simply work out of the box when people type ``https`` instead of ``http``. ## Shared hosts ##