Security
· 33 checks — HTTP headers, CSP, TLS handshake, and cookie hygiene rolled into one auditable list.FContent Security PolicyActionNo enforcing CSP policy foundFIX
CSP is the most effective defense against XSS attacks. Add a Content-Security-Policy header to restrict resource loading.
default-src 'self'Without a CSP, a single XSS bug can exfiltrate everything users type — credentials, payment data, session tokens.
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Content-Security-Policy is the browser-enforced firewall against XSS. With a strict CSP, a script injection that would otherwise steal session cookies is silently blocked. Without it, your only defense is hoping every input on every form is escaped correctly forever. Start in Report-Only mode, fix violations, then graduate to enforcing.
Source: OWASP / MDN
Report-Only logs violations but does not block them. Deploy an enforcing policy when ready.
Report-Only CSP catches violations but doesn't block them — protection is only realized when you graduate to enforcing.
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Report-Only mode is the right starting point: deploy, monitor reports for a week, fix violations, then graduate to enforcing CSP. Sites that get stuck in Report-Only forever have all the operational cost of a CSP with none of the security benefit. Once your reports are clean, swap the header name to `Content-Security-Policy`.
Source: MDN CSP
DCSP Inline-Style ReadinessAction192 inline style attribute(s) detectedFIX
DPermissions-Policy GranularityAction30% high-risk feature coverage (3/10)FIX
DHTML Version DisclosureAction2 software version(s) disclosed in HTMLFIX
CSecurity HeadersAction6 of 10 headers properly configuredREVIEW
CSP is the most important header for preventing XSS attacks. See the CSP section for detailed analysis.
default-src 'self'Without a CSP, a single XSS bug can exfiltrate everything your users type — including credentials.
Learn more ▾ ▴
Content-Security-Policy is the browser-enforced firewall against XSS. With a strict CSP, a script injection that would otherwise steal session cookies or rewrite the page is silently blocked. Without it, your only defense is hoping every input on every form is escaped correctly forever.
Source: OWASP / MDN
Without includeSubDomains, subdomains can still be accessed over HTTP.
max-age=31536000; includeSubDomainsWithout includeSubDomains, a forgotten dev subdomain over HTTP can set malicious cookies that ride to the apex.
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HSTS without includeSubDomains protects only the exact domain. Cookies set on a non-HSTS subdomain can ride to the apex via cookie-scope attacks. The fix is one directive append. Verify all subdomains support HTTPS first — adding includeSubDomains to a domain with HTTP-only subdomains breaks them.
Source: RFC 6797
COOP isolates your browsing context, preventing cross-origin side-channel attacks. Set to 'same-origin'.
same-originCOOP isolates your top-level browsing context from cross-origin windows — without it, popup-based side-channel attacks remain possible.
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Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy: same-origin prevents cross-origin pages from sharing a browsing-context group with yours. This blocks cross-window references that enable Spectre-style timing attacks and tab-nabbing. Required if you want to enable SharedArrayBuffer.
Source: MDN / web.dev
COEP prevents loading cross-origin resources without explicit permission. Required for SharedArrayBuffer and high-resolution timers.
require-corpCOEP enforces that all embedded resources opt-in to cross-origin embedding — required for cross-origin isolation features.
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Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy: require-corp ensures every embedded resource (script, iframe, image) explicitly allows being loaded cross-origin. Combined with COOP, this enables the cross-origin-isolated context that unlocks SharedArrayBuffer, high-resolution timers, and other powerful APIs.
Source: MDN / web.dev
Submit your domain to hstspreload.org to close the trust-on-first-use gap. Requires a preload-ready HSTS header (max-age=31536000+, includeSubDomains, preload).
Not in the Chrome preload list — first-time visitors over plain HTTP can be downgraded by a network attacker before HSTS kicks in.
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The HSTS header only protects users who have already visited the site (TOFU window). Adding your domain to the Chrome preload list closes that gap so HSTS is enforced from the very first connection. Requires a preload-ready header (max-age=31536000+, includeSubDomains, preload) then submission at hstspreload.org. Inclusion ships in the next Chrome release after acceptance.
Source: hstspreload.org
BWAF / Bot ProtectionNo WAF detected via response headersREVIEW
Csecurity.txtActionNo security.txt file foundREVIEW
security.txt
No security.txt found at /.well-known/security.txt
BTrusted Types (XSS Sink Hardening)Trusted Types not enabledREVIEW
BPermissions-Policy3 directives, 2 missingREVIEW
Raw Header
Feature Permissions
BCORS ConfigurationNo CORS headersREVIEW
No CORS headers detected.
Cross-origin requests are blocked by browser same-origin policy.
Origin reflection test
Some servers mirror the request Origin header, which can be exploited. Test manually:
curl -sI -H "Origin: https://evil.com" <url> | grep -i access-control
CKnown vulnerability matchesAction9 known vulnerability match(es) against detected techREVIEW
Known Vulnerabilities
| Library | Version | Severity | Summary | Fixed In |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | XSS is possible in the data-target attribute. | 3.4.0 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | XSS in collapse data-parent attribute | 3.4.0 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | XSS in data-target property of scrollspy | 3.4.0 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | XSS in data-container property of tooltip | 3.4.0 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | In Bootstrap before 3.4.0, XSS is possible in the tooltip data-viewport attribute. | 3.4.0 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | In Bootstrap before 3.4.0, XSS is possible in the affix configuration target property. | 3.4.0 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | XSS in data-template, data-content and data-title properties of tooltip/popover | 3.4.1 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | medium | Bootstrap Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability for data-* attributes | 3.4.1 |
| Bootstrap | 3.3.5 | low | Bootstrap before 4.0.0 is end-of-life and no longer maintained. | 3.999.999 |
A+TLS & CertificatesTLS 1.3, 7 checks passedPASS
HTTP/2 provides multiplexing and header compression for better performance.
HTTP/1.1 forces the browser to make sequential requests, multiplying latency on every page.
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HTTP/2 (and HTTP/3) multiplex many requests over a single connection, eliminating head-of-line blocking. HTTP/1.1 forces the browser to either queue requests or open many parallel connections — both worse. Most modern web servers support HTTP/2 with one config line.
Source: MDN Web Docs
Without stapling, the browser performs a separate OCSP roundtrip on first connection -- adding latency and leaking the visited host to the CA. Enable OCSP stapling on your TLS server.
Without OCSP stapling, every first-time visitor pays an extra OCSP roundtrip — and the CA learns who's visiting your site.
Learn more ▾ ▴
OCSP stapling has the server fetch its own revocation status from the CA and attach the signed response to the TLS handshake. Without it, browsers contact the CA directly: extra latency for the user and a privacy leak (the CA sees who connected). Enable ssl_stapling on (nginx) / SSLUseStapling On (Apache) / OCSPStapling = on (Caddy auto-enables).
Source: RFC 6961 / Mozilla Server-Side TLS guide
Certificate Chain
A+Cross-Origin Tab SafetyAll 26 new-tab link(s) carry rel=noopenerPASS
A+Bot Challenge DetectionScan reached real page content (no bot-protection interstitial)PASS
A+Soft-404 DetectionNo soft-404 patterns detected in page title or headingsPASS
A+Empty Page DetectionPage has substantive body text and no placeholder / template-leak signalsPASS
A+Geo-Restriction DetectionNo geo-restriction signals detected -- scan reached the page from an allowed regionPASS
A+Maintenance Mode DetectionNo maintenance-mode signals detected -- scan reached a normal pagePASS
A+Subresource Integrity AdoptionPage has no third-party scripts or stylesheets -- SRI not applicablePASS
A+CORS DepthNo CORS response headers -- the resource is same-origin-only by browser defaultPASS
A+Referrer-Policy StrictnessReferrer-Policy is `strict-origin-when-cross-origin` (modern default -- full URL same-origin, origin-only cross-origin)PASS
A+Source Map ExposureNo source maps accessible (probed 3 candidate URL(s))PASS
A+Open Redirect SurfaceNo redirect-shaped query parameters in DOM linksPASS
A+Auth SecurityPage is not a login form -- auth-security checks are N/APASS
A+Subdomain Inventory ExposureNo risky subdomain names in certificate SANsPASS
A+Subresource IntegrityNo external resourcesPASS
A+JS Library VulnerabilitiesNo known vulnerabilitiesPASS
No known JavaScript library vulnerabilities detected.
A+Information LeakageNo exposuresPASS
No sensitive files exposed — all paths returned 404.
| Path | Status | Category | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| /.git/HEAD | ✓ Not found | Version Control | — |
| /.git/config | ✓ Not found | Version Control | — |
| /.svn/entries | ✓ Not found | Version Control | — |
| /.env | ✓ Not found | Configuration | — |
| /.env.local | ✓ Not found | Configuration | — |
| /.env.production | ✓ Not found | Configuration | — |
| /wp-config.php | ✓ Not found | Configuration | — |
| /.htaccess | ✓ Not found | Configuration | — |
| /phpinfo.php | ✓ Not found | Debug | — |
| /server-status | ✓ Not found | Debug | — |
| /server-info | ✓ Not found | Debug | — |
| /.well-known/security.txt | ✓ Not found | Security Policy | — |
| /package.json | ✓ Not found | dependency-manifest | — |
| /composer.json | ✓ Not found | dependency-manifest | — |
| /Gemfile | ✓ Not found | dependency-manifest | — |
| /Gemfile.lock | ✓ Not found | dependency-manifest | — |
| /requirements.txt | ✓ Not found | dependency-manifest | — |
| /pom.xml | ✓ Not found | dependency-manifest | — |
| /.gitlab-ci.yml | ✓ Not found | ci-config | — |
| /.travis.yml | ✓ Not found | ci-config | — |
AEmail SecurityDMARC: reject, SPF: -all, DKIMPASS
Receivers apply your policy to only this percentage of authentication failures. The rest are delivered as if no policy existed. Move to pct=100 once you've verified DMARC reports look clean.
Informational: a labeled value pair from the audit.
MTA-STS forces inbound mail to use TLS, preventing downgrade attacks. Requires both a TXT record at _mta-sts.<domain> and a policy file at https://mta-sts.<domain>/.well-known/mta-sts.txt.
Without MTA-STS, inbound mail can be silently downgraded to plain SMTP by a network attacker.
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MTA-STS (RFC 8461) tells sending mail servers to use TLS and to refuse delivery if TLS fails. Requires both a TXT record at _mta-sts.<domain> AND a policy file at https://mta-sts.<domain>/.well-known/mta-sts.txt. Without it, an active attacker on the network path can strip STARTTLS and read the email in plaintext.
Source: RFC 8461
TLS-RPT (RFC 8460) lets MTAs report TLS-handshake failures, so you can detect and fix MTA-STS misconfigurations. Add a TXT record at _smtp._tls.<domain>.
Without TLS-RPT, you have no visibility into inbound TLS failures — MTA-STS misconfigurations stay hidden until users complain.
Learn more ▾ ▴
TLS-RPT (RFC 8460) is the feedback channel for MTA-STS: senders post aggregate reports of TLS-handshake failures to the URI in your _smtp._tls TXT record. Without it, an MTA-STS misconfiguration silently rejects mail and you find out only when someone notices missing email.
Source: RFC 8460
BIMI (Brand Indicators for Message Identification) lets supporting clients (Gmail, Apple Mail, Yahoo) display your verified logo next to your messages. Optional but raises trust signals. Requires DMARC at p=quarantine or p=reject to be honored.
Security gaps expose your site and users to attacks, eroding trust.