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Traffic report about thesecurityblogger.com - here you can find answers to questions like these:
The most recent time we have spotted thesecurityblogger.com on Alexa rankings was on September 18, 2015 (3,172 days ago) and then the ranking was 343,016. And this is a bit worse position than average position for thesecurityblogger.com in Alexa.
Our system has never spotted thesecurityblogger.com in Quantcast ratings.
This fact suggests this domain potentially has low traffic from USA and Canada.
Website is hosted on IP 64.90.49.201.
The host name of this IP address is apache2-emu.myrtlepoint.dreamhost.com.
There are 3 websites hosted on exact the same IP and 145 websites that are hosted on similar IP address.
Our database records shows that this website can be similar to: barbaradoyen.com, toiletrepair.ca, and maybe even more.
We've checked thesecurityblogger.com recently and it was online. The load time was 0.2393 seconds slower than average. The size of document was 7,901 bytes shorter than usually. The website contained 5 links less than the average.
It seems that thesecurityblogger.com is optimised for mobile devices.
We did not encounter any safety threats while testing this website.
We did not find any data about thesecurityblogger.com being listed in the blacklists.
It seems that thesecurityblogger.com was never dropped before.
Click here to see the list of dropped domains
Our system found out that there could be 291 domains with the same beginning as thesecurityblogger.com
Our system found out that there could be 87 mistakes made in the typing process.
And here you'll find analysis of HTML code:
PROPERTY | VALUE |
---|---|
Keywords: | Security, Network Security, 802.1x, Access Control, Cisco NAC, Identity Services Engine, ISE, ISE1.0, Joey, Joey Muniz, Muniz, joseph muniz, NAC, network access control, Network Admission Control, Cisco, Cisco Security, Sourcefire, thesecurityblogger |
WEB address: | http://thesecurityblogger.com/ |
Summary: | Cyber Security And Other Technology Ramblings |
<title> | The Security Blogger |
Hosting information: | Click here for more hosting information |
Size of HTML code: | -7,901 bytes compared to average |
Total number of links: | -5 links compared to average |
Load time: | +0.23929435 seconds compared to average |
META TAG PROPERTY | VALUE |
og:description | You know whats something you don't see everyday ... a security company claiming their technology is "Hack Proof". Kaspersky and company spent 14 years developing this new black box that is supposedly secured at layer 3 with a home grown OS that isn't based on Linux. They are already making claims that Kaspersky OS can only be hacked by future quantum technology meaning today's computing power would cost too much for any attacker to attempt to compromise the system. It all sounds dandy however time will tell as most exploits tend to not hit the expected areas of a system. At least they are trying and bold enough to drop the challenge. I respect that and their efforts to create a secure option for host computing. Here is more on this new release. The original post can be found HERE. I’ve anticipated this day for ages – the day when the first commercially available mass market hardware device based our own secure operating system landed on my desk. And here she is, the beaut. This |
twitter:card | summary |
og:image | http://www.thesecurityblogger.com/wp-content/plugins/all-in-one-seo-pack/images/default-user-image.png |
twitter:description | You know whats something you don't see everyday ... a security company claiming their technology is "Hack Proof". Kaspersky and company spent 14 years developing this new black box that is supposedly secured at layer 3 with a home grown OS that isn't based on Linux. They are already making claims that Kaspersky OS can only be hacked by future quantum technology meaning today's computing power would cost too much for any attacker to attempt to compromise the system. It all sounds dandy however time will tell as most exploits tend to not hit the expected areas of a system. At least they are trying and bold enough to drop the challenge. I respect that and their efforts to create a secure option for host computing. Here is more on this new release. The original post can be found HERE. I’ve anticipated this day for ages – the day when the first commercially available mass market hardware device based our own secure operating system landed on my desk. And here she is, the beaut. This |
shareaholic:wp_version | 7.6.0.5 |
twitter:image | http://www.thesecurityblogger.com/wp-content/plugins/all-in-one-seo-pack/images/default-user-image.png |
shareaholic:site_name | The Security Blogger |
og:title | The Security Blogger |
twitter:title | The Security Blogger |
og:url | http://www.thesecurityblogger.com/ |
shareaholic:site_id | 18a70d61a50c4a27a4a002b6fbf78ba4 |
og:site_name | The Security Blogger |
generator | WordPress 4.6.1 |
shareaholic:language | en-US |
viewport | width=device-width, initial-scale=1 |
Website: | thesecurityblogger.com |
---|---|
Most recent position: | 343,016 reached on September 18, 2015 (3,172 days ago) |
Times found in Alexa list: | 58 |
Average position: | 466,607 |
All time highest position: | 320,224 reached on September 14, 2015 (3,176 days ago) |
All time lowest position: | 574,334 reached on August 5, 2015 (3,216 days ago) |
This table shows websites that use 64.90.49.201 (apache2-emu.myrtlepoint.dreamhost.com) for hosting:
List of websites | IP address and hostname |
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64.90.49.201 apache2-emu.myrtlepoint.dreamhost.com |
Note: The matching part of IP address is marked with this style.
No data about thesecurityblogger.com being in Quantcast ratings...
There are 291 alternatives to thesecurityblogger.com
We believe that these mistakes can be made in the typing process of "thesecurityblogger.com":
No data about thesecurityblogger.com being in dropped domains database...