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    US charges Greek national for selling insider trading subscriptions in the Dark Web

    US prosecutors have charged a Greek national for offering insider trading services to clients through the Dark Web.

    According to both the US Department of Justice (DoJ) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Apostolos Trovias is facing criminal charges “in connection with his scheme to solicit and sell stock trading tips and pre-release earnings and deal information regarding public companies.” The charges were unsealed in Manhattan federal court last week. The 30-year-old, operating under the name “TheBull,” has allegedly operated an insider trading business since at least 2016 through the Dark Web and encrypted messaging services, through to early 2021.  Trovias reportedly both obtained and monetized insider information, offering clients data including stock tips based on confidential trading records and pre-release earnings reports.  While the alleged trader began his career on AlphaBay, once the underground marketplace was seized and closed down by law enforcement in 2017, he switched to selling information directly. Tips could be purchased on a pay-as-you-go or subscription basis and Trovias secured approximately 100 clients willing to subscribe to the ‘service.’  According to the SEC, Trovias claimed that order-book data for sale was obtained from an employee of a securities trading firm. One pre-earnings report, for example, was allegedly sold for roughly $5,000 in the Bitcoin (BTC) cryptocurrency. 

    In 2020, he also allegedly attempted to create a marketplace dedicated to the sale and exchange of insider information called the “Inside Information Auction Site.”  Trovias is being charged with one count of securities fraud and another count of money laundering. The US takes allegations of insider trading seriously, and so the securities fraud count represents up to 25 years behind bars, whereas money laundering carries a penalty of up to 20 years.  Separately, the SEC has charged the alleged trader with violating antifraud legislation in federal securities laws, and the agency is seeking injunctions, disgorgement, and penalties.  “Behind the veil of the Dark Web, using encrypted messaging applications and emails, Trovias created a business model in which he sold — for profit — proprietary information from other companies, stock trading tips, pre-release earnings, and other inside information, as we allege,” commented FBI Assistant Director William Sweeney Jr. “The FBI operates within the Dark Web too, and as Trovias learned today, we don’t stop enforcing the law just because you commit federal crimes from behind a router with your keyboard.” Previous and related coverage Have a tip? Get in touch securely via WhatsApp | Signal at +447713 025 499, or over at Keybase: charlie0 More

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    Thousands of PS4s seized in Ukraine in illegal cryptocurrency mining sting

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    Thousands of PlayStation 4 gaming consoles have been seized after their discovery in an old warehouse, used to illicitly mine for cryptocurrency.

    Ukraine’s Security Service said last week that in the city of Vinnytsia, located along the Southern Bug river, there was an abandoned warehouse in its industrial area that once belonged to an electricity company, JSC Vinnytsiaoblenergo.  Upon entry, law enforcement found what it has called the country’s “largest underground cryptocurrency farm.” In total, roughly 3,800 gaming consoles were rigged together and stored on metal racks — and over 500 graphics cards and 50 processors were also found.  The hardware was allegedly used to facilitate cryptocurrency mining, while those apparently responsible stole the electricity required from the city.  Current estimates suggest that the electricity stolen amounts from between $186,200 to $259,300 per month.  Raids took place at the cryptocurrency farm and Ukrainian police also say that searches took place at the “offender’s residences,” where draft notes on electricity usage, notebooks, handsets, and USB storage devices were also seized. 

    In a statement (translated), JSC Vinnytsiaoblenergo said that “our company has nothing to do with any illegal activity,” and “cryptocurrency mining equipment has never operated in the premises owned by our company.” The utility company also added that there was no evidence of the theft of electricity. The investigation was conducted by Ukrainian law enforcement agencies under the supervision of the Prosecutor General’s Office.  In a separate but notable cryptocurrency farm plot, back in 2019, Chinese law enforcement uncovered cables hidden in fish ponds that were used to connect to an oil rig’s electrical grid. Active Bitcoin (BTC) rigs were found hidden in a shed after drones were deployed to track down the perpetrator.  Previous and related coverage Have a tip? Get in touch securely via WhatsApp | Signal at +447713 025 499, or over at Keybase: charlie0 More

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    Firefox 90 lands with just-in-time support for unblocking Facebook when users log in

    Image: Mozilla
    Firefox 90 appeared from Mozilla this week, and one of the new features that arrived was better support for logging in using Facebook credentials when the browser is in strict tracker blocking mode, or a private window. SmartBlock first appeared in Firefox 87, released in March, and it provided local stand-ins for blocked third-party tracking scripts. “These stand-in scripts behave just enough like the original ones to make sure that the website works properly. They allow broken sites relying on the original scripts to load with their functionality intact,” Mozilla said at the time. One area where SmartBlock failed though, was supporting Facebook login buttons across the web. In a blog post, Mozilla explained it was due to Facebook trackers being included on the list of tracker provided by its partner, but the updated SmartBlock 2.0 should fix this. “Prior to Firefox 90, if you were using a private browsing window, when you clicked on the ‘Continue with Facebook’ button to sign in, the ‘sign in’ would fail to proceed because the third-party Facebook script required had been blocked by Firefox,” the blog states. “Now, SmartBlock 2.0 in Firefox 90 eliminates this login problem. Initially, Facebook scripts are all blocked, just as before, ensuring your privacy is preserved. But when you click on the ‘Continue with Facebook’ button to sign in, SmartBlock reacts by quickly unblocking the Facebook login script just in time for the sign-in to proceed smoothly.” Mozilla said the new functionality worked on “numerous websites”, and Firefox would continue blocking Facebook trackers on all sites where a user has not logged in.

    Users on Windows will now have Firefox updated in the background, with Firefox 90 checking every 7 hours for a new version. To enable background updating, users need to allow for updates to be automatically installed and tick a “When Firefox is not running” checkbox. The feature only works when the browser has been installed from its installer, rather than decompressed from a zip file, and does not have a language pack installed. Although Mozilla said it would gradually roll out the feature, a napp.update.background.scheduling.enabled flag exists for users to turn it on now. Firefox on Windows will also gain an about:third-party page that lists modules, such as anti-virus, that have been injected into the browser and could cause issues. Firefox 90 will also support Fetch Metadata Request Headers to allow web apps to defend against some cross-site attacks. “The HTTP request header Sec-Fetch-Site allows the web application server to distinguish between a same-origin request from the corresponding web application and a cross-origin request from an attacker-controlled website,” Mozilla said. “Inspecting Sec-Fetch-* Headers ultimately allows the web application server to reject or also ignore malicious requests because of the additional context provided by the Sec-Fetch-* header family. In total there are four different Sec-Fetch-* headers: Dest, Mode, Site, and User which together allow web applications to protect themselves and their end users against [cross-site attacks].” The latest edition of Firefox finally marks the end of support for FTP in the browser, and most users who do not have hardware-accelerated WebRender will use software WebRender instead. Related Coverage More

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    Singapore's Changi Airport is using digital certificates to speed up immigration checks

    Image: Affindi
    Affinidi CEO Glenn Gore says he is optimistic that digital verification certificates will enable air travel to resume safely and securely.While speaking during the virtual Amazon Innovation Day on Wednesday, Gore pointed out that Singapore’s Changi Airport is proof that such a system could work. He noted that Affinidi’s Universal Verifier solution is currently being used by the airport to digitally authenticate travellers arriving in the country have had tested negative to COVID-19, as well as any other required health credentials. “This solution is already live now. Actually, if you visit Singapore and pass through Changi Airport, we’ll be going through the Affinidi’s Universal Verifier with immigration,” he said. “We recognise 15 different global standards today, so that the immigration officer doesn’t matter what country you’re coming from, [and has] a consistent presentation of that information in a safe and secure way to allow free passage.”He explained that using a self-sovereign identity verifiable solution helps remove the need for immigration to “deal with complex sets of information of different pathology reports from around the world”, while also enable individuals to own and control who they share their health data with. “Using verifiable credentials, the passenger experience starts with us, booking our ticket online, just like we normally do. At the completion of purchasing that ticket, the airline is actually going to send me some instructions as to this new requirement where I need to go and visit a clinic, and take a COVID swab test … the clinic is going to issue me a COVID test result. In that test result will be a QR code that I can look at, along with the printed details,” Gore said.  “I can head to the airport and the first experience I’m going to have is talking to the checking agent, as I go to check in for my flight. They’re going to ask to see my credential, so that’s already on my device, that airline agent is able to use universal verification to check the data that’s on my device safely and securely; they can see that it hasn’t been tampered with, that it’s not fraudulent, and apply this against rules engines and have all the rules for the source and destination countries that we go to,” Gore added.

    “Ultimately, they’re doing this to issue me a green tick saying I meet all of the entry requirements, so they can issue a boarding pass and I can get on that flight.”When I arrive, I need to do an international border crossing, and again the immigration officer is going to want to see proof … so again, I’m going to use exactly the same QR code, the immigration officer is going to scan that apply it to the exactly same rules engine.”In addition to using it for flights, Gore believes the system could be used for a range of other domestic scenarios including checking into a hotel, to entering large scale sporting events and concerts, and “all the things we enjoyed before COVID”. Related Coverage More

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    Macquarie Telecom earmarks AU$78m to build 'largest ever' data centre in Sydney

    Image: Macquarie Telecom
    Macquarie Telecom has announced it is building what it is calling its “largest ever” data centre to be based in the company’s existing Macquarie Park data centre campus in Sydney.According to Macquarie Telecom, it will invest an initial AU$78 million to build the core and shell of the new 32-megawatt Intellicentre 3 (IC3) Super West facility. The facility will be based in the Sydney North Zone at the company’s existing Macquarie Park Data Centre Campus and help bring the company’s total IT load at the campus to 50 megawatts. It will also be designed to connect with the IC3 East facility.The new facility will also be home to a new Sovereign Cyber Security Centre of Excellence, which according to the company, will be responsible for monitoring and managing cybersecurity events around the clock. An initial 31 cyber specialists are expected to run and operate the centre by 2024. “This global scale data centre will be one of the most certified facilities in the region,” Macquarie Data Centres group executive David Hirst said, pointing out IC3 Super West will be designed to adhere to a range of standards including ISO 27001, PCI DSS 3.2, ISO 45001, and ISO 14001.”Data is growing exponentially, and we have demonstrated time and time again our ability to deliver infrastructure to meet that growth. Our data centres are sovereign, secure and certified to manage Australia’s most important data and drive the digital economy,” Hirst added.Subject to being granted permission by the board in early 2022, construction of phase 1 of IC3 Super West is expected to be completed by the second half of calendar year 2023.

    Plans for the IC3 Super West facility follows Macquarie completing the build of its IC5 Bunker facility in Canberra, and Phase 1 of the IC3 East at its Macquarie Park Data Centre Campus.In June, Macquarie Telecom’s Canberra Campus was one of three providers certified by the Australian government to store sensitive data locally. The Digital Transformation Agency said the campus was certified against the requirements defined in the Hosting Certification Framework, which it has administered since March 2019.Related Coverage More

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    The impact of Apple’s sideloading philosophy on developers

    (Image: Apple)On June 23, Apple unleashed messaging to explain why users should only install Apple-approved apps through its App Store on iOS. This is an extension of the US District Court case between Apple and Epic, where Apple positioned “sideloading,” the practice of installing apps outside its App Store, as dangerous. While it is true that Apple has led the industry in privacy — in particular making it difficult for businesses and rogue apps to obtain unnecessary personal information — connecting this messaging to non-Apple installs seems a bit of an overreach. Moreover, it sets up a challenging dichotomy for developers: Do you promise choice or reassurance as your app’s key marketing message? 

    Smartphone As A “Pattern-Of-Life” Device Apple has cited at least one study saying,”[…] devices that run on Android had 15 times more infections from malicious software than iPhone.” In a June 16 interview, Tim Cook said that Android has 47 times more malware than iOS does. These are interesting numbers, given the relative sizes of the Android and iOS markets. Android has almost 73% market share worldwide, while iOS sits at just under 27%. As with the PC and Mac markets, it makes sense that the prime targets are those with the largest market share. However, this also brings up an interesting conundrum — there are billions of PCs and, pointedly, Macs in the world, and they don’t have locked ecosystems. Apple further makes the argument that smart devices are carried with you all day, so they can gather more “pattern-of-life” details than traditional computers. But how well does this apply to iPads, which are just as mobile as iPhones, and that Apple is also positioning as traditional laptop replacements? What This Means For The Mobile Developer Regardless of messaging, Apple’s tactics have an impact on app developers. Small development shops may suffer remembering the hoops they jumped through to sign an iOS app before Xcode 8. Even today, some developers hold their breath when submitting to the App Store. In 2020, Apple says it rejected almost a million new apps. Of those, about half were misleading, violated privacy guidelines, contained undocumented features, or had fraudulent violations. Regardless, as an iOS developer, you have two basic choices: Ship using the App Store or not. If you are a smaller developer and want to monetize to any reasonable degree, you must use the Store. However, let’s say you’re not as worried about monetization — perhaps you are a larger organization with different needs. What options do you have to distribute your app outside the App Store? Use the web. Despite the limitations that Apple has put on web APIs, you can still do a lot with JavaScript on Safari. Creating a progressive web app allows you to “install” it. You’ll have to walk your users through adding your icon to the home screen, but if you can live without push notifications, geofences, Bluetooth, serial connections, magnetometers, light sensors, NFC, and battery life (among other things), you can create code that runs in Safari. Microsoft recently did this to allow cloud streaming of Xbox games. The good news for web developers: Biometric ID support was added in Safari 14 (PublicKey.isUserVerifyingPlatformAuthenticatorAvailable), and camera and microphone APIs were added in Safari 11 (MediaDevices.getUserMedia). Geolocation has been around since Safari 3 (Geolocation.getCurrentPosition).Join the Apple Developer Enterprise Program. If your app is meant for employees of your company and you work with more than 100 employees, your company can apply to enter the Apple Developer Enterprise Program. This will permit you to ship your app to employees without going through the App Store. In the past, enterprise certificates were used to distribute apps outside an organization; now, Apple has said it reserves the right to review apps distributed via enterprise certificates. Use ad hoc distribution. If you have a small number of high-value customers, you can distribute your app as a .ipa file that you generate and make available for download. Installation can be tricky: You will need to get the UDID of each device (up to 100) and entitle the devices in your account on developer.apple.com. Some developers point users to http://whatsmyudid.com/ to walk them through the process. You’ll also have to manage revoking and readding UDIDs and reissuing provisioning profiles on your own if your users switch devices. Ship the source. Since 2015, Xcode has allowed you to build software for iOS devices without a developer account. Telling users how to download and install the Xcode binaries, and possibly the Xcode command line binaries, if you want to automate an install is not trivial. However, it does allow you to deploy your software to customer devices — if those customers have a Mac with a version of macOS that supports the Xcode version you want to use. Since users have your source, they are free to change it. You can package your code into a framework or library to reduce what users can modify. Require a jailbroken device. This is extreme and limits your user base to those who have the technical skill to hack their device. There’s also the obvious concern of taking advantage of security defects to run arbitrary code, and there may not be exploits for all iOS devices. However, your more technical users may have already jailbroken. Jailbreaking requires a Mac, and some jailbreaks require that the phone remain tethered to a computer while booting. Once jailbroken, a user can install your app from a third-party app store — Cydia is a commonly used one. Of course, there’s also a sixth option, which we don’t recommend: Give up on Apple. Given that Android apps will run not just on Android devices but now Windows 11 desktops and laptops, that is an option for those who want to make their own decisions about security, privacy, and what they install. 

    Really, it comes down to use case. For consumer-facing or information-worker apps, you likely have to abide by Apple’s sideloading philosophy. However, for task worker apps, where enterprises provision the device to employees or even business partners, sideloading flexibility has some value. If you are supporting franchisees or an extended network of suppliers, you have the option of preferring Android rather than navigating Apple’s restrictions. This post was written by Senior Analyst Andrew Cornwall, and it originally appeared here.  More

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    Cybersecurity organizations announce new first responder credentialing program

    Cybersecurity companies and organizations are banding together to create a cybersecurity first responder credentialing program designed to support both large and small organizations dealing with cyber incidents. The ISA Global Cybersecurity Alliance is working with CISA on the effort alongside the Incident Command System for Industrial Control Systems (ICS4ICS) and more than 50 other cybersecurity companies, universities and corporations. The groups will be incorporating FEMA’s Incident Command System framework for response structure, roles, and interoperability, according to a statement from ISA. Deloitte, Dragos, Ford Motor Company, Fortinet, Honeywell, Johnson Controls, KPMG, Nozomi Networks, Pfizer, Tenable, CyberOwl and Idaho State University are just a few of the organizations involved in the ISA Global Cybersecurity Alliance. “For many years, we’ve needed ICS4ICS, to enable collectively organized cyber and physical responses in a unified way. Credentialing cybersecurity first responders is an important milestone in this valuable public-private partnership,” said ISAGCA Advisory Board chairperson Megan Samford, Samford, who is also chief product security officer of Schneider Electric’s energy management business, said the groups have “developed an adjudication process and certified our first four responders.”The first round of credentials were given to Samford, CISA branch chief of cyber defense coordination Mark Bristow, FireEye senior manager of industrial control systems Neal Gay and the US Army Reserve’s Brian Wisniewski. 

    “I’m proud to be one of them and stand ready to help companies recover from cyber incidents,” Samford added. FEMA’s Incident Command System framework is currently used in response to natural disasters, industrial accidents and other incidents while the ICS4ICS’ methods are used by organizations to identify incidents, assess any damage, address immediate challenges, communicate with stakeholders and eventually resume operations. 

    “The framework applies traditional Incident Command Systems best practices to cybersecurity incidents, ensuring common terminology and enabling diverse incident management and support entities to work together,” the groups said in a statement.  “ICS4ICS provides clearly defined command structures, including standard roles needed in a response, and the framework can scale to support small or extremely large-scale incidents that impact many organizations.”A committee within ICS4ICS will manage the adjudication process, which the organization said will involve applications and candidate evaluations by a panel of incident command system subject matter experts. “The proven approach is vetted by industry companies and subject matter experts and the program has significant value for small to medium sized entities that do not have the time, finances, or personnel to assign a full-time cyber response unit, but still need to develop plans and train employees accordingly,” the groups said.  More

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    Best free website builder 2021: Easy-to-use top picks

    There are plenty of good reasons to build your own personal website. Perhaps you’d like to share archival photos and documents with friends and family members, exhibit your prized baseball card collection, publish a novel, or simply blog about your life and travels. These are all good motivators to sign up for a reliable and reasonably priced web content-management toolset.Beyond the free “personal” web pages offered by Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, Twitter, and other social networks — in which your personal information becomes part of the network’s lingua franca — there are several excellent yet free or inexpensive web services that offer alternative ways to establish your own internet stake in the ground. These website-building products enable users to design, provision, and maintain a personal website in minutes or hours, depending upon how much time and effort one chooses to spend on the project.Working with a website builder is relatively easy because they offer a what-you-see-is-what-you-get editing interface — meaning what you see. At the same time, you edit your site is what you will actually see if your website was live and viewed in a browser. The best website builders are rich in features that include professionally designed website templates, easy-to-use, drag-and-drop editors, and onboard hosting services.Chief criteria used for this list include Intuitive usability (easy-to-follow instructions and performance)Ease of design (drag and drop controls, wizards, pre-built templates)A domain name includedProfessional emailMobile device-readinessSecurity optionsSpecial features (is it commerce-ready?)Optimization for search enginesSome of these listed services will have all of the above; some will miss one or more of these but may offer other features.See more: ZDNet’s list of best e-commerce site builders

    Best of the free options

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    One thing that comes out clearly in research here is that Wix is a head-and-shoulders No. 1 by acclamation of the resources we used. Wix is an intuitive-to-use site builder with hundreds of page templates — most of which are attractively designed — drag-and-drop elements, easy-to-follow wizards, and a menu of helpful widgets.For people looking to get a website online with minimal effort and maximum creative freedom, Wix should be one of your test choices. No coding or FTP knowledge is required. All a user needs is an email address to get started with Wix’s web hosting. If you don’t mind ads, you can publish a site free of charge for as long as you like. It’s that way with all the free sites.Wix offers total creative control in that you can drag anything, anywhere. It also offers online storage for site assets, e-commerce tools, useful video backgrounds, and title animations. Wix’s new Editor X interface is intuitive to use and respected in the highly competitive field of website-building services. In summary, Wix is a simple-to-use, multi-faceted tool that is well worth a test drive–whether for its free or paid versions. Wix’s most important features:Intuitive Editor X interface.Many optional widgets.Hundreds of templates for specific businesses and other uses.Good mobile-site-building tools.Rich web-store features.Excellent uptime and customer service support.Many commerce options, including the ability to sell digital downloads.Free version option.Wix pricing plans: Basic: no cost, ad-supported; Combo account (3GB of storage and 2GB of monthly data transfers), $14 per month; VIP plan (35GB of storage, a domain name, unlimited monthly data transfers, a professional logo, and priority support), $39 per month. Business sites with shopping carts and other features go for between $23 and $49 per month.Enterprise-level plans require consultation with Wix and start at $500 per month. For details, go here.

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    Established high quality based on open source

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    WordPress is by far the most utilized internet content management system in the world, powering 37 million sites — about 40% of all websites in 2021, according to market analyst Kinsta and researcher Netcraft. WordPress also owns a commanding 60.8% share of the CMS market; Digital.com reports that it powers 30% of the world’s top 1000 websites.Since its founding in 2003, the open source-based WordPress provides hosting for more than 500 sites built each day somewhere in the world. WordPress’s Plugin Directory features 54 000+ free plugins; its WooCommerce version powers 22% of the world’s top 1 million e-commerce sites. The main reasons why so many people put WordPress to work are simplicity in usability, its free option and generally low cost, and numerous features, mostly from the open-source community. The term “WordPress” is often used interchangeably when referring to two software variations. There are significant differences between WordPress.com and WordPress.org that you’ll want to know before picking the platform for your project. WordPress.org is an open-source content management system, while WordPress.com is a popular blogging platform with basic functionality that can be accessed free of charge.WordPress is available in 196 languages, far more than other competitors.WordPress’s most important features:Simple-to-use editing interface.A forgiving design system that preemptively identifies and notifies users of mistakes.A large number of optional widgets.Online storage for web assets.Hundreds of templates for specific businesses and other uses.Free version option and other modestly priced versions.*Be advised that some coding is required for the upper-level editions.WordPress pricing and monthly plans: Basic: no cost; all others go for between $5 and $100 per month, depending upon features and hosting options.

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    An alternative to consider for making a fast and clean-looking site.

    Site 123

    Site 123 is a rising developer-created website builder with about 5 million users that wants to be the easiest-to-use platform now available for do-it-yourselfers. Of course, lots of services make the same claim, but Site123 deigns to prove their point with an easy-to-use interface and templates. Site 123 is best for building a small, quick website on a premade template, and it has a generous free plan along with straightforward onboarding and web design options. Instead of operating like a traditional drag-and-drop website builder, Site123 has users pick their preferences and customize a curated template based on that niche, which appeals to beginners with no design or development experience.Site 123 does have limited design and technical features and doesn’t offer a lot of customer support. Again, if you’re keeping it simple, these caveats aren’t a problem. Site 123’s most important features:Provides all the basics someone needs to get started.No-frills design and layout promote fast development.An adequate number of easy-to-use templates.Free of charge based on ads.Instead of operating like a traditional drag-and-drop website builder, Site123 has you pick your niche and then customize a curated template based on that niche, which appeals to beginners who have no design or development experience (think DIY-ers who need to create a website ASAP without having any website experience).*Be advised that a basic Site 123 account isn’t optimal for equipping and maintaining a commercial website.Site 123 pricing and monthly plans: Basic service is free of charge; paid plans start at $12.80/month, which includes a free domain for a year, the ability to connect your custom domain, 10GB of storage, 5GB of bandwidth, and the ability to send 100 email messages to your mailing list per month — It also removes the Site123 branding that comes with the free plan.

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    Good for beginners, but the free version might be too restrictive for most users.

    SimpleSite

    SimpleSite certainly lives up to its name, giving its users an easy, straightforward path to building basic websites. SimpleSite emphasizes speed over perfection, which is evident in its simple page editor. If you want creative freedom to try new things and experiment with others, a free SimpleSite won’t be the builder for you. It’s not particularly intuitive; straying from the chosen template can cause problems. If you want to stay on the straight and narrow, you’re fine with SimpleSite.SimpleSite’s most important features:Free version: no-frills design and layout promote fast development.Software guides users through the building process; simply choose a color scheme, add images, title, and domain name, then create a login. This final step automatically publishes your site, which you can then go back and finish editing.SimpleSite is beginner-friendly. It wasn’t always the most intuitive; at times, its simplicity becomes restrictive, making it difficult to do some basic design functions.*Be advised that SimpleSite isn’t optimal for equipping and maintaining a commercial website.SimpleSite pricing and monthly plans: Basic: no cost (includes SimpleSite ads, 15 pages, limited design options, five online store products, mobile-optimized); other options range from $15.49 to $30.49 per month for e-commerce and full-featured personal sites.

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    Highly recommended for starting a business site.

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    Weebly offers step-by-step guidance on building a new website and maybe the best on this list for e-commerce business owners. Weebly can handle entire payment processes, email marketing, multiple domains, and a long list of other features — though not all of them are available in the free version.As part of the Square product suite, Weebly’s payments are handled by the Square point-of-sale system, so it’s in effect an automated payment process — whether for a pop-up shop or an online store. Not having to worry about the financial underpinnings of a site can be a load lifted off the owner’s shoulders.Weebly’s most important features:Easy customization.Integration with other apps and add-ons.Intuitive and easy to use.Constantly improving and adding new features.Meets standards for security and cookies.It has an auto-save function, so work doesn’t get lost.Many template options to use as a starting point.   Dynamic video background.Built-in image editor.Weebly pricing and monthly plans: Basic: no cost; other options range from $8 to $38 per month for e-commerce and full-featured personal sites.

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    Good option for European website makers

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    Jimdo has a good set of tools for a person needing a website builder that is super-simple and straightforward — and extra credit if the user is based in Europe (it handles most European languages). Jimdo is not optimal if a user needs any kind of advanced technical features or wants flexibility over specific design changes.With Jimdo, there are two ways of creating your website: Jimdo Creator and Jimdo Dolphin. Jimdo Creator is Jimdo’s main platform, a full-fledged editing interface. Users can add in their own content, resize items, and drag elements into different positions. Jimdo Dolphin is an ADI (artificial design intelligence) package. Answer a few questions about what you want on the site, and Jimdo will create it for you. Both are excellent ways to build a website but focus on very different requirements.Jimdo’s most important attributes:Inexpensive to publish an advertisement-free website.Unlimited storage space on the business plan or higher.Help and support are concise and to the point.Middle of the road in terms of ease of use; some people found it straightforward, while others were left frustrated by Jimdo’s restrictive template design.Jimdo pricing and monthly plans: Basic: no cost; other options range from $9 to $15 per month for e-commerce and full-featured personal sites.

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    Visual CMS design is a plus.

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    Webflow is another contender for grabbing market share that some of the larger, more well-known web-building tools don’t have. Users have marveled at the ease of creating sites on Webflow, and since everything is linked to CSS-style classes, the designs stay fairly clean compared to other drag ‘n drop / WYSIWYG editors. Some users are sold on the Visual CMS design functionality, which helps design custom-tailed CMSes. The CSS Grid and Flexbox layout options are also a nice aid in designing and aligning elements.Reviewers have noted that the client editor isn’t the most intuitive and makes it hard to edit certain aspects, such as background images.Webflow’s most important attributes:Strong tools for crafting phone and tablet sites.Good web store tools.It offers a customized database.Enables use of custom CSS and HTML code.Strong e-commerce options, with support for digital downloads.Unlimited storage and monthly data transfers with all plans.Webflow pricing and monthly plans: Basic: no cost; other options range from $12 to $36 per month for e-commerce and full-featured personal sites. 

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    What are the advantages of using DIY website builders?

    Especially for smaller companies and self-employed people, website builders offer great value because you can create your own website within a short time and without great cost. The interface is very intuitive, and programming skills are not necessary. The creation of a blog or online store is also easily possible with many providers.

    How long does it take to create a homepage with a website builder?

    Thanks to ready-to-use templates (usually sorted by industry), you can quickly create the first draft. Afterwards, modules for texts, image galleries, videos, contact forms, and other elements can be placed on the page and filled with content. In most cases, they can be easily placed in the right position by simply dragging and dropping. How much time you need varies greatly depending on the project, preparation, and maintenance. Some websites go online within five minutes; others take one to two days of work.

    How much does it cost to create your own online presence?

    Many providers offer their users a permanently free version of their website builder. Compared to the paid ones, however, the free plans come with some restrictions. This means that there may be tools and functions that you cannot use as a free user. In addition, websites created for free have advertising references to the provider both on the homepage and in the domain. If you don’t want this, you should consider upgrading your plan for a monthly fee of about $5 to $40.

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