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Security report for

mgpremium.fr

Scanned 1 hour ago

Cached result
0 /100
A
Overall grade
Better than 98%

Executive Summary

PDF PRO

We performed a comprehensive security analysis of mgpremium.fr across 5 categories. The website received an overall score of 93/100 (grade A), with 0 critical issues, 4 warnings, and 26 passed checks.

Overall assessment: mgpremium.fr demonstrates a strong security posture. The website follows most security best practices and is well-configured. Minor improvements are possible but no urgent issues were found. Continue monitoring regularly to maintain this level of security.

Strong areas

SSL & HTTPS

Content & CMS

Security Headers

Performance & SEO

Needs improvement

DNS & Email Security

Website Health Check

Simple overview for everyone

Is my website safe for visitors?

Yes — your website uses encryption and has security protections in place.

Good

Can my website be found by Google?

Yes — your website is accessible to search engines and loads at a reasonable speed.

Good

Is my email protected against spoofing?

Not fully — attackers could send fake emails pretending to be from your domain. This is used in phishing attacks.

Action needed

Is my website leaking sensitive data?

No leaks detected — configuration files and sensitive data appear to be properly protected.

Good

Does my website respect visitor privacy?

Yes — a privacy policy and cookie consent appear to be in place.

Good

Fixed

Subresource Integrity (SRI)

Trust & WHOIS

See domain age, registrar, expiry date, server location, and reputation checks across security databases.

Domain Age WHOIS Data Server Location Reputation Check Expiry Alert

Malware & Reputation

Check if your site is flagged by malware databases, blacklists, and antivirus vendors worldwide.

VirusTotal URLhaus Spamhaus PhishTank Cloudflare DNS

Advanced Security Checks

Detect open ports, exposed files, API vulnerabilities, TLS weaknesses, and subdomain takeover risks.

Open Ports Exposed Files API Security TLS Ciphers Subdomain Takeover

Privacy & GDPR

Analyze cookie consent, privacy policy presence, third-party trackers, and GDPR compliance signals.

Cookie Consent Privacy Policy Tracker Detection GDPR Compliance

Quality & Accessibility

Check accessibility compliance, robots.txt, branding, broken links, and carbon footprint.

Accessibility Robots & SEO Branding Broken Links Carbon Footprint
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DNS & Email Security

63/100

SPF record configured

SPF record found: "v=spf1 include:_spf.mail.hostinger.com ~all".

DMARC record configured

DMARC found but policy is "none" — emails are monitored but not rejected. Value: "v=DMARC1; p=none".

Fix: Upgrade your DMARC policy from p=none to p=quarantine or p=reject to actively block spoofed emails.

CAA record configured

CAA record found — only authorized Certificate Authorities can issue SSL certificates for this domain.

DKIM record configured

No DKIM record found for common selectors. DKIM cryptographically signs outgoing emails, making them verifiable and preventing tampering in transit.

Fix: Configure DKIM in your email provider (Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, etc.) and publish the TXT record they provide at {selector}._domainkey.mgpremium.fr

MTA-STS (email transport security)

No MTA-STS record found at _mta-sts.mgpremium.fr. Without it, email delivery to your domain could silently fall back to unencrypted connections.

Fix: Implement MTA-STS: add a TXT record at _mta-sts.mgpremium.fr with value "v=STSv1; id=YYYYMMDD01" and publish a policy file at https://mta-sts.mgpremium.fr/.well-known/mta-sts.txt

IPv6 support

Domain has an AAAA record — IPv6 is supported.

BIMI record

No BIMI record found. BIMI lets your brand logo appear in email clients that support it — a trust and branding signal for recipients.

Fix: BIMI requires DMARC with p=quarantine or p=reject. Then add a TXT record at default._bimi.mgpremium.fr: v=BIMI1; l=https://yourdomain.com/logo.svg

DNSSEC

DNSSEC could not be verified via this automated check (PHP DNS resolvers strip DNSSEC data). Check with your domain registrar or use dnsviz.net to verify.

SSL & HTTPS

100/100

HTTPS / SSL enabled

The website is accessible over HTTPS.

SSL certificate valid

Certificate is valid and expires on 2026-06-04 (32 days left).

HTTP redirects to HTTPS

HTTP traffic is permanently (301) redirected to HTTPS.

HSTS header configured

Strict-Transport-Security header found with max-age=31536000. includeSubDomains is set.

No weak cipher suites

Server does not accept known weak cipher suites (RC4, 3DES, EXPORT, NULL).

TLS 1.0 and 1.1 disabled

Server only accepts TLS 1.2 or higher. Deprecated TLS versions are not supported.

Content & CMS

100/100

No mixed content detected

No insecure HTTP resources (scripts, images, stylesheets) found in the page HTML.

CMS admin panel not publicly accessible

No publicly accessible CMS admin interface found at common paths.

CMS version not exposed

No CMS version information found in the page source.

Subresource Integrity (SRI)

No external scripts or stylesheets without Subresource Integrity hashes detected.

No open redirect

No open redirect detected via common redirect parameters.

Directory listing disabled

Directory listing is not enabled — files cannot be browsed directly.

Security Headers

100/100

Server version not disclosed

The Server header does not expose version information.

Content-Security-Policy

CSP header enforced: (policy is set)

X-Frame-Options

X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN — protects against clickjacking.

X-Content-Type-Options

X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff is set — prevents MIME-type sniffing.

Referrer-Policy

Referrer-Policy: strict-origin-when-cross-origin

Permissions-Policy

Permissions-Policy header found — browser feature access is restricted.

Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy

COOP: same-origin — protects against cross-origin window attacks and Spectre-based data leaks.

Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy

No Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy (COEP) header found. Note: COEP breaks external embeds (YouTube, maps, ads) that don't send CORP headers.

Fix: Consider adding Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy: require-corp only if your site does not embed third-party content.

Referrer-Policy: strict-origin-when-cross-origin
X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN
Permissions-Policy: camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), interest-cohort=()
X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'none'; script-src 'self' https://www.google.com https://www.gstatic.com; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data:; media-src 'self'; connect-src 'self' https://www.google.com https://recaptchaenterprise.googleapis.com; frame-src https://www.google.com; object-src 'none'; base-uri 'self'; form-action 'self'; frame-ancestors 'self'; upgrade-insecure-requests
Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains; preload
Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy: same-origin

Performance & SEO

100/100

Fast server response time (TTFB)

Time To First Byte: 54 ms (measured from our scanner server) — excellent.

Response compression enabled

Compression is enabled (br) — reduces transfer size and speeds up page loads.

robots.txt present

A robots.txt file was found and is accessible.

XML sitemap present

An XML sitemap was found — helps search engines discover and index your pages.

security.txt present

No security.txt file found at /.well-known/security.txt or /security.txt.

Fix: Create a security.txt file (RFC 9116) at /.well-known/security.txt to provide security researchers with a responsible disclosure contact.

Warnings (4)

What is this?

DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance) builds on SPF and DKIM to give domain owners control over what happens to emails that fail authentication checks.

Why does it matter?

SPF alone is not enough — DMARC adds a policy layer that tells receiving servers what to do with suspicious emails (monitor, quarantine, or reject). It also provides reporting so you can see who is sending email as your domain.

How to fix it

Add a TXT record to your DNS: Host: _dmarc (e.g. _dmarc.yourdomain.com) Value: v=DMARC1; p=quarantine; rua=mailto:dmarc@yourdomain.com Start with p=none to receive reports without affecting mail delivery: v=DMARC1; p=none; rua=mailto:dmarc@yourdomain.com After analysing reports for a few weeks, upgrade to: p=quarantine → suspicious mail goes to spam p=reject → suspicious mail is blocked entirely Free DMARC report analysis: dmarcian.com, postmarkapp.com/dmarc.

What is this?

DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail) adds a cryptographic signature to every outgoing email. The signature is created with a private key on your mail server and verified by recipients using a public key published in DNS.

Why does it matter?

DKIM proves that an email actually came from your mail server and was not modified in transit. Without DKIM, anyone can send emails that appear to be from your domain (spoofing), and DMARC alignment checks will fail even if SPF passes.

How to fix it

DKIM is configured in your email provider, not directly in DNS. Here is the process: 1. Generate a DKIM key pair in your email provider: - Google Workspace: Admin console → Apps → Gmail → Authenticate email - Microsoft 365: Admin center → Settings → Domains → DKIM - Mailchimp/SendGrid/Mailjet: Each has a DKIM setup page in their dashboard 2. Copy the TXT record they provide and add it to your DNS: Name: selector._domainkey.yourdomain.com Value: v=DKIM1; k=rsa; p=MIGf... 3. Activate DKIM signing in your provider after publishing the DNS record. The selector name (e.g. 'google', 'selector1') comes from your email provider.

What is this?

MTA-STS (Mail Transfer Agent Strict Transport Security) is a standard that forces other mail servers to use encrypted TLS connections when delivering email to your domain. Without it, a network attacker could silently strip TLS from email in transit.

Why does it matter?

Email is delivered between servers using SMTP. By default, SMTP tries TLS but falls back to plaintext if TLS is not available — a downgrade attack. MTA-STS prevents this fallback, ensuring all email delivered to your domain is encrypted in transit.

How to fix it

Implementing MTA-STS requires two things: 1. A DNS TXT record at _mta-sts.yourdomain.com: v=STSv1; id=20240101001 2. A policy file hosted at: https://mta-sts.yourdomain.com/.well-known/mta-sts.txt Policy file content: version: STSv1 mode: enforce mx: mail.yourdomain.com max_age: 86400 Start with mode: testing to see reports before enforcing. Use mta-sts.io for a guided setup.

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