In 2019, it is even more important that you secure your WordPress website.
A couple of years ago it was estimated that only 44% of web traffic came from genuine visitors. The rest was from bots, hacking tools, scrapers and spammers. With that volume or dodgy web traffic coming to your website, are you confident that your website can withstand a hacker attack? What if I told you that an estimated 37,000 websites are hacked EVERY DAY. How confident are you now?
Securi, a top internet security service, reported that they dealt with 500 website infections a day, 7 days a week. Out of 11,000 infected sites they dealt with, 78% were Wordpress sites.
Once a site is hacked, it can be used for all kinds of malicious purposes, such as directing your traffic, stealing customer details, deleting files, changing your login details to lock you out, sending spam emails to millions of people (which will label your domain as spam and remove any chance it has of ranking in Google), you get the idea?
And hackers don’t just target large, popular sites. They’ll use computer software to scan millions of websites for vulnerabilities, and then attack the soft targets. There is no softer target than a newly setup Wordpress website!
There is obviously good reason to be concerned about your website security. However, I don’t want you to think that Wordpress is an insecure platform that should be avoided, it isn’t. Wordpress is actually very secure and if a security hole is found, it is usually plugged very quickly by the Wordpress security team and pushed out to all Wordpress installs – automatically. The real security issues come from the people running the websites. They often don’t have enough knowledge to make educated decisions about the content they put on their site, the plugins they use or the themes they install.
