Wordfence alternatives

10 Best Wordfence Alternatives to Protect Your Site

If you are looking for a security solution for your WordPress website, you have undoubtedly considered WordFence. WordFence is easily one of the most popular and widely used security solutions available today.  But is WordFence right for you?  Wordfence is known for a plethora of problems: So, while WordFence is a great free security plugin…

10 Best Sucuri Alternatives to Protect Your WordPress Site

If you are considering investing in a security plugin to protect your WordPress site, you have undoubtedly heard of Sucuri. Sucuri is widely used by WordPress sites, but nevertheless has serious shortcomings. The biggest problem is that the malware scanner is not able to flag all the malware, which gives you a false sense of…

eliminate render-blocking resources wordpress

How to Eliminate Render-Blocking Resources on WordPress (CSS + Javascript)

If you’re a WordPress user, I strongly recommend making website performance a priority. By delivering fast-loading pages to visitors, you will improve your search engine rankings, increase website traffic and give readers a great user experience. A key part of optimising a website is analysing web pages using performance benchmarking tools such as Google PageSpeed…

wordpress vulnerabilities

16 WordPress Security Issues (Vulnerabilities) & Tips To Fix Them

WordPress makes it easy for anyone to have a website quickly, but there is a lot of noise online that talks about how many security issues it has.  Does WordPress have security issues? Yes Are they insurmountable? NoShould it stop you from building your website with WordPress? Most certainly not  A conservative estimate puts the number…

WordPress security

The Ultimate WordPress Security Guide

Malware costs businesses billions of dollars every year in lost revenue, legal costs, damage to branding, and data theft. To make matters worse, hackers constantly evolve their tactics, so malware keeps changing and getting harder to spot.   There are data breaches almost every day, and the scary part is how much people are losing to…

WordPress Salts

Complete Guide to WordPress Salts and Security Keys

In articles about WordPress security, you may have come across WordPress salts or security keys, and wondered what those were. In a nutshell, they are random strings used by WordPress to encrypt your password.  Passwords are one of the most important aspects of website security, so it is worth understanding how WordPress salt keys work…

Sucuri vs Wordfence

Sucuri vs Wordfence: Which Security Plugin is Best For Your WordPress Website

Wordfence and Sucuri are both WP security plugins that inevitably come up when debating which one is best for your site. On the face of it, the choice may seem difficult. Sucuri’s plugin has a server-side malware scanner and a cloud-based firewall. If your site gets hacked, they offer up unlimited manual malware removal. Wordfence,…

ithemes security vs wordfence

iThemes Security vs Wordfence: Which Security Plugin Should You Choose?

iThemes Security looks like a great deal at just $199 for unlimited websites, and because of its unbeatable price, it has been a serious contender amongst the top security plugins for WordPress.  In the other corner we have Wordfence, the undisputed heavyweight in this category. Wordfence is known for the feature-heavy free plugin, and their…

jetpack vs wordfence

Jetpack vs Wordfence: Which is Better? 

Jetpack is a multipurpose administrative plugin, and packages backups, security, growth and speed in one handy-dandy plugin. Plus, it has the cachet of being from the Automattic stable, so it obviously carries weight in the WordPress domain. Our other contender is Wordfence, arguably one of the most popular security plugins today. They are known for…

how does wordpress cache work

How Does WordPress Caching Work?

The goal of every WordPress performance plugin is to reduce the time it takes to deliver a page to visitors. One of the main ways to achieve this is by storing a copy of each page. This is known as “Page Caching“. On a typical unoptimized WordPress website, average page loading times can be around…

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