For free certificates, you can have a look at both LetsEncrypt 
(https://letsencrypt.org/) and Startcom (https://www.startcomca.com/) which 
used to be StartSSL.

Startcom uses something similar to the traditional ssl certificate 
request/validate/get approach.

LetsEncrypt is fully automated but you need to have control over the server 
that the certificate will be used on (to run the agent).

On Wednesday, April 26, 2017 at 11:06:58 AM UTC-4, Mark S. wrote:
>
> Hi Dave,
>
> If you have your own server, you might be able to add SSL. SSL requires a 
> certificate, which used to run $100 a year. Some hosts will let you use a 
> shared one that works for everyone on the machine. Or you can generate your 
> own uncertified one. An uncertified certificate will cause your browser to 
> generate alarming messages but you just add them as a permanent exception 
> to your browser and then you're good to go. An uncertified certificate will 
> encrypt your traffic just as well as a certified one, it's just that your 
> browser doesn't have a chain of trust back to the uncertified one.
>
 

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