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Security report for

www.uab.com.mm

Scanned 1 hour ago

Cached result
0 /100
D-
Overall grade
Better than 14%

Executive Summary

PDF PRO

We performed a comprehensive security analysis of www.uab.com.mm across 5 categories. The website received an overall score of 41/100 (grade D-), with 8 critical issues, 7 warnings, and 14 passed checks.

Overall assessment: www.uab.com.mm has significant security gaps that should be addressed as soon as possible. The current configuration leaves the website vulnerable to common attacks. We strongly recommend reviewing the critical issues listed in this report and implementing the recommended fixes without delay.

Top priority fixes:

HTTPS / SSL enabled — The website does not appear to support HTTPS.
SSL certificate valid — SSL connection failed or certificate is invalid.
HSTS header configured — No Strict-Transport-Security (HSTS) header found.

Needs improvement

DNS & Email Security

Content & CMS

Performance & SEO

Needs work

Security Headers

SSL & HTTPS

Website Health Check

Simple overview for everyone

Is my website safe for visitors?

Not fully — your website is missing important security protections that keep visitors safe.

Action needed

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?

Yes — your domain has email authentication records (SPF/DMARC) that prevent others from sending fake emails on your behalf.

Good

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

New issues

HTTPS / SSL enabled
SSL certificate valid
CMS version not exposed
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

75/100

SPF record configured

SPF record found: "v=spf1 include:spf.protection.outlook.com include:mailgun.org ~all".

DMARC record configured

DMARC record found with policy "reject": "v=DMARC1; p=reject; pct=100; fo=1; ri=3600; rua=mailto:eb3d0ffe@dmarc.mailgun.org,mailto:39dce0dc@inbox.ondmarc.com,mailto:8ba34fa638@rua.easydmarc.asia,mailto:2f0e033a0c824c9f8d68ef03dd15df58@dmarc-reports.cloudflare.net,mailto:nyeinchan.ncn@uab.com.mm; ruf=mailto:eb3d0ffe@dmarc.mailgun.org,mailto:39dce0dc@inbox.ondmarc.com,mailto:8ba34fa638@ruf.easydmarc.asia,mailto:nyeinchan.ncn@uab.com.mm;".

CAA record configured

No CAA record found. Any Certificate Authority can issue SSL certs for your domain.

Fix: Add a CAA DNS record, e.g.: 0 issue "letsencrypt.org" to restrict SSL issuance.

DKIM record configured

DKIM record found (selector "selector1") — outgoing emails are cryptographically signed.

MTA-STS (email transport security)

No MTA-STS record found at _mta-sts.uab.com.mm. 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.uab.com.mm with value "v=STSv1; id=YYYYMMDD01" and publish a policy file at https://mta-sts.uab.com.mm/.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.uab.com.mm: 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

20/100

HTTPS / SSL enabled

The website does not appear to support HTTPS.

Fix: Install an SSL certificate and redirect all traffic to HTTPS.

SSL certificate valid

SSL connection failed or certificate is invalid.

Fix: Install a valid SSL certificate from a trusted Certificate Authority.

HTTP redirects to HTTPS

HTTP traffic is permanently (301) redirected to HTTPS.

HSTS header configured

No Strict-Transport-Security (HSTS) header found.

Fix: Add: Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains

Content & CMS

70/100

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

WordPress detected. Version "6.8.5" is exposed in the page source, which helps attackers target known vulnerabilities.

Fix: Remove the generator meta tag and strip ?ver= parameters from script/style URLs.

WordPress XML-RPC disabled

WordPress XML-RPC endpoint is not publicly accessible.

WordPress user enumeration blocked

/wp-json/wp/v2/users exposes a public list of WordPress usernames. Attackers use these for targeted brute-force and credential-stuffing attacks.

Fix: Add to your theme's functions.php: add_filter('rest_endpoints', function($e) { unset($e['/wp/v2/users'], $e['/wp/v2/users/(?P<id>[\d]+)']); return $e; });

Subresource Integrity (SRI)

63 of 63 external script(s)/stylesheet(s) load without an integrity= hash. If the CDN is compromised, malicious code could be silently injected into your pages.

Fix: Add integrity= and crossorigin= attributes to external <script> and <link> tags. Generate hashes at https://www.srihash.org/

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

11/100

Server version not disclosed

The Server header does not expose version information.

Content-Security-Policy

No Content-Security-Policy header found.

Fix: Add a Content-Security-Policy header to restrict which resources the browser may load, preventing XSS attacks.

X-Frame-Options

No X-Frame-Options header found. The site may be vulnerable to clickjacking.

Fix: Add X-Frame-Options: DENY or SAMEORIGIN, or use CSP frame-ancestors.

X-Content-Type-Options

X-Content-Type-Options header is missing.

Fix: Add X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff to prevent browsers from MIME-sniffing responses.

Referrer-Policy

No Referrer-Policy header found.

Fix: Add Referrer-Policy: strict-origin-when-cross-origin to control how much referrer info is sent.

Permissions-Policy

No Permissions-Policy header found.

Fix: Add a Permissions-Policy header to restrict browser features like camera, microphone, and geolocation.

Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy

No Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy (COOP) header found. Note: COOP can break popup-based flows (payments, OAuth) and browser back/forward cache.

Fix: Consider adding Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy: same-origin if your site does not use cross-origin popups.

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.

Performance & SEO

75/100

Fast server response time (TTFB)

Could not measure server response time.

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.

Critical issues (8)

What is this?

HTTPS (HyperText Transfer Protocol Secure) encrypts all communication between the visitor's browser and your server using TLS (Transport Layer Security). Without it, data is sent in plain text.

Why does it matter?

Without HTTPS, anyone on the same network (coffee shop Wi-Fi, corporate proxy) can read or modify the data being transferred — including passwords, form submissions and personal information. Google also ranks HTTPS sites higher and Chrome marks HTTP sites as "Not Secure".

How to fix it

Install a TLS certificate on your web server. Free certificates are available via Let's Encrypt (certbot.eff.org). Most hosting panels (cPanel, Plesk, Forge) have one-click SSL installation. After installing, configure your server to redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS.

What is this?

An SSL/TLS certificate has an expiry date. Once expired, browsers show a full-page warning to visitors and refuse to connect without clicking through a security warning.

Why does it matter?

An expired certificate breaks trust immediately — visitors see a red warning screen and most will leave. Search engines may also de-index or lower the ranking of sites with certificate errors.

How to fix it

Renew your certificate before it expires. If you use Let's Encrypt, set up auto-renewal with certbot (sudo certbot renew --dry-run to test). Most hosting providers send expiry warnings by email. Set a calendar reminder at 30 and 7 days before expiry.

What is this?

HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) is a response header that tells browsers to only ever connect to your site over HTTPS — even if the user types http:// or clicks an http:// link. The browser enforces this locally for the duration of max-age.

Why does it matter?

Even with an HTTP redirect in place, the very first request could go over HTTP before being redirected. A network attacker could intercept that first request (SSL stripping attack). HSTS prevents this by making the browser upgrade to HTTPS before making any request.

How to fix it

Add this header to your HTTPS responses: Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains Nginx: add_header Strict-Transport-Security "max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains" always; Apache: Header always set Strict-Transport-Security "max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains" Only add HSTS after you are certain your entire site works over HTTPS, including all subdomains if you use includeSubDomains.

What is this?

Content Security Policy (CSP) is a browser security feature that lets you control which resources (scripts, styles, images, fonts) a page is allowed to load, and from which origins.

Why does it matter?

CSP is one of the most effective defences against Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) attacks. Without CSP, an attacker who injects malicious JavaScript into your page can load resources from anywhere, steal session cookies, or redirect users.

How to fix it

Add a Content-Security-Policy header. Start with a report-only policy to detect issues without breaking anything: Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only: default-src 'self'; script-src 'self'; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; Once tested, switch to enforcing: Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'; ... CSP policies can be complex for sites with third-party scripts. Use https://csp-evaluator.withgoogle.com/ to evaluate your policy.

What is this?

X-Frame-Options controls whether your website can be embedded in an <iframe>, <frame>, or <object> on another website.

Why does it matter?

Without this header, attackers can embed your site invisibly in an iframe on a malicious page and trick users into clicking buttons or links without knowing it (clickjacking). This can be used to perform actions on behalf of a logged-in user.

How to fix it

Add one of these response headers: X-Frame-Options: DENY — prevents all framing X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN — allows framing only from the same domain Nginx: add_header X-Frame-Options "SAMEORIGIN" always; Apache: Header always set X-Frame-Options "SAMEORIGIN" Modern alternative: use CSP with frame-ancestors directive: Content-Security-Policy: frame-ancestors 'self';

What is this?

X-Content-Type-Options with the value "nosniff" tells browsers not to guess (sniff) the content type of a response, but to strictly use the Content-Type header the server sends.

Why does it matter?

Without this header, a browser might interpret an uploaded text file as JavaScript if it contains script-like content — a technique attackers can exploit to run malicious code even when file uploads are allowed.

How to fix it

Add this header to all responses: X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff Nginx: add_header X-Content-Type-Options "nosniff" always; Apache: Header always set X-Content-Type-Options "nosniff" Laravel: add to middleware or in .htaccess.

What is this?

The Referrer-Policy header controls how much information about the originating page is included in the Referer header when a user navigates away from your site or when resources are loaded.

Why does it matter?

Without a Referrer-Policy, the full URL of the current page (which may include session tokens, user IDs, or sensitive paths) is sent to external sites in the Referer header. This can leak private information to third-party analytics, CDN providers, or ad networks.

How to fix it

Recommended value: Referrer-Policy: strict-origin-when-cross-origin (sends origin only for cross-origin requests, full URL for same-origin) Nginx: add_header Referrer-Policy "strict-origin-when-cross-origin" always; Apache: Header always set Referrer-Policy "strict-origin-when-cross-origin" Alternatives: no-referrer (most private), same-origin (no cross-origin referrer).

What is this?

Time To First Byte (TTFB) is the time between the browser sending a request and receiving the first byte of the response from the server. It reflects server processing time, not download speed.

Why does it matter?

A slow TTFB means the server takes too long to process each request — caused by slow database queries, no caching, or underpowered hosting. Google uses TTFB as a signal in Core Web Vitals. Pages with high TTFB feel slow even on fast connections.

How to fix it

Common fixes depending on the cause: 1. Enable server-side caching - WordPress: WP Super Cache, W3 Total Cache - Laravel: Response caching, OPcache - Nginx: FastCGI cache 2. Add a CDN (Content Delivery Network) - Cloudflare (free tier available) - Serves cached responses from edge servers close to the visitor 3. Optimise slow database queries - Enable query logging and identify N+1 problems - Add database indexes 4. Upgrade hosting - Shared hosting often has high TTFB under load - Consider a VPS or managed hosting like Laravel Forge + DigitalOcean Note: our measurement is taken from our server. Geographic distance adds latency — use a CDN to reduce this globally.

Warnings (7)

What is this?

CAA (Certification Authority Authorization) is a DNS record that specifies which Certificate Authorities (CAs) are allowed to issue SSL/TLS certificates for your domain.

Why does it matter?

Without CAA records, any of the hundreds of trusted CAs worldwide can issue a certificate for your domain. A compromised or rogue CA could issue a fraudulent certificate for your domain, enabling MITM attacks. CAA limits this risk to your chosen CA(s).

How to fix it

Add CAA records to your DNS. Example for Let\'s Encrypt only: 0 issue "letsencrypt.org" For multiple CAs (e.g. Let\'s Encrypt + DigiCert): 0 issue "letsencrypt.org" 0 issue "digicert.com" To also allow wildcard certificates: 0 issuewild "letsencrypt.org" For email notifications on unauthorized issuance attempts: 0 iodef "mailto:security@yourdomain.com" Check current CAA records at: sslmate.com/caa

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.

What is this?

The WordPress version number is visible in the HTML source — either in the generator meta tag (<meta name="generator" content="WordPress 6.2">) or in script/style URLs as ?ver=6.2.

Why does it matter?

Knowing the exact WordPress version allows attackers to look up known CVEs (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures) for that version and target known exploits. Version disclosure is an information leak that makes targeted attacks easier.

How to fix it

Remove the generator meta tag by adding to functions.php: remove_action('wp_head', 'wp_generator'); Remove ?ver= query strings from URLs: function remove_version_strings($src) { if (strpos($src, '?ver=') !== false) { $src = remove_query_arg('ver', $src); } return $src; } add_filter('style_loader_src', 'remove_version_strings'); add_filter('script_loader_src', 'remove_version_strings'); Alternatively use a security plugin like Wordfence or iThemes Security which does this automatically.

What is this?

The WordPress REST API exposes a /wp-json/wp/v2/users endpoint that by default lists all registered user accounts, including their usernames and display names.

Why does it matter?

Knowing valid usernames makes brute-force login attacks dramatically easier — an attacker no longer needs to guess both the username and password. They can enumerate all users in seconds and then focus password attacks on those known accounts.

How to fix it

Add to your theme's functions.php: add_filter('rest_endpoints', function($endpoints) { if (isset($endpoints['/wp/v2/users'])) { unset($endpoints['/wp/v2/users']); } if (isset($endpoints['/wp/v2/users/(?P<id>[\d]+)'])) { unset($endpoints['/wp/v2/users/(?P<id>[\d]+)']); } return $endpoints; }); Or use a security plugin like Wordfence or iThemes Security that includes this option.

What is this?

Subresource Integrity (SRI) is a browser security feature that lets you specify a cryptographic hash for external scripts and stylesheets. The browser refuses to execute the resource if its content does not match the hash.

Why does it matter?

If a CDN you rely on is compromised (a real and recurring attack vector), an attacker can replace your JavaScript library with malicious code that steals user data, injects cryptomining scripts, or performs other attacks. SRI prevents this by making the browser verify the file has not been altered.

How to fix it

Add integrity= and crossorigin= attributes to your external resources: <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/jquery@3.7.1/dist/jquery.min.js" integrity="sha256-/JqT3SQfawRcv/BIHPThkBvs0OEvtFFmqPF/lYI/Cxo=" crossorigin="anonymous" ></script> Generate hashes for any URL at: https://www.srihash.org/ For build tools, use webpack-subresource-integrity or vite-plugin-sri to add hashes automatically during builds.

What is this?

Permissions-Policy (formerly Feature-Policy) lets you control which browser features and APIs your site is allowed to use, and whether third-party content embedded in iframes can access them.

Why does it matter?

Without this header, embedded third-party scripts or iframes could theoretically request access to the camera, microphone, geolocation, payment APIs, and more. Restricting these features reduces your attack surface.

How to fix it

Example header that disables features not needed for most sites: Permissions-Policy: camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=() Nginx: add_header Permissions-Policy "camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=()" always; Apache: Header always set Permissions-Policy "camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=()" Only disable features you genuinely don't use. Adding this header is a low-effort, high-value improvement.

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