WWW in a URL stands for "World Wide Web." It's a traditional prefix indicating the resource is part of the web. HTTPS is an extension of HTTP that ensures secure data transfer over the web using encryption protocols like TLS or SSL. It's vital for websites handling sensitive information, signified by a padlock icon in the browser's address bar.


Everything is ok

  https://www.zbor.md

STATUS 200 OK
Header Value
Cache-Control s-maxage=31536000, stale-while-revalidate
Connection keep-alive
Content-Length 466101
Content-Type text/html; charset=utf-8
Date Sun, 13 Oct 2024 00:02:09 GMT
ETag "174nsqrhqxq9v6m"
Strict-Transport-Security max-age=15724800; includeSubDomains
Vary RSC, Next-Router-State-Tree, Next-Router-Prefetch, Accept-Encoding
set-cookie NEXT_LOCALE=ro; Path=/; Expires=Wed, 08 Oct 2025 00:02:09 GMT; Max-Age=31104000; Secure; SameSite=none
x-middleware-rewrite /ro
x-middleware-set-cookie NEXT_LOCALE=ro; Path=/; Expires=Wed, 08 Oct 2025 00:02:09 GMT; Max-Age=31104000; Secure; SameSite=none
x-nextjs-cache HIT

WWW HTTPS is properly configured

Properly configuring WWW and HTTPS for a website means setting up the website's settings to ensure secure access and data transmission. It includes enabling HTTPS encryption with a valid SSL/TLS certificate, implementing security measures like security headers, considering SEO practices, and optionally configuring redirection for consistency. This configuration enhances security, user trust, and website performance while providing a seamless browsing experience.