Open
Cached
·
just now
83/100
SECURITY SCORE
Certificate Information
Subject
CN=api.fetch.ai
Issuer
C=US, ST=Arizona, L=Scottsdale, O=Starfield Technologies, Inc., OU=http://certs.starfieldtech.com/repository/, CN=Starfield Secure Certificate Authority - G2
Valid From
October 31, 2025
Valid Until
November 30, 2026
335 days
Public Key
RSA
2048 bit
Adequate
Signature Algorithm
SHA256-RSA
SHA-256 Fingerprint
C9:BF:C7:A9:28:76:5A:1F:4C:00:49:94:76:50:A7:3E:3B:B1:B3:4F:3B:A8:53:5E:53:C7:D4:BC:B9:7C:27:03
Alternative Names
Security Configuration
TLS Protocols
TLS 1.2
TLS 1.3
Forward Secrecy
Supported
(Modern clients use PFS)
HTTP Security Headers
Status
Strict-Transport-Security
Missing
Not configured
Content-Security-Policy
Weak
upgrade-insecure-requests
X-Frame-Options
Good
SAMEORIGIN
X-Content-Type-Options
Good
nosniff
Referrer-Policy
Missing
Not configured
Permissions-Policy
Missing
Not configured
Recommendations
- • Add Strict-Transport-Security header with max-age of at least 1 year
- • Significantly strengthen CSP directives
- • Add Referrer-Policy header (recommended: strict-origin-when-cross-origin)
- • Consider adding Permissions-Policy to control browser features
CAA Records (Certificate Authority Authorization)
CAA Records
Not Configured
(Any CA can issue certificates)
CAA Issues
- • No CAA records configured - any CA can issue certificates
Recommendations
- • Implement CAA records to restrict which CAs can issue certificates for your domain
- • This adds an extra layer of security against unauthorized certificate issuance
- • Example: Add CAA record 'example.com. CAA 0 issue "letsencrypt.org"'
- • Consider adding 'iodef' record to receive security incident reports