Credit Card Processing, Swiped Card Processing, Keyed Credit Card Processing, Retail Credit Card Merchants, Wireless Credit Card Merchant, Mail Order Merchant, Telephone Order Merchants (MOTO) Internet Order Merchants, High Risk Credit Card Processor, Off
WRPage :
Complete In-Page SEO Analysis
WRScoreWRScore(beta) is calculated on the basis of pageviews, unique visitors and unique content. :
credit-card-processing.worldwideoptimize.com
Reviewed by WebRankStats on
Jan 22
.
Rating:
Rating:
1.21 out of
10
Credit Card Processing, Swiped Card Processing, Keyed Credit Card Processing, Retail Credit Card Merchants, Wireless Credit Card Merchant, Mail Order Merchant, Telephone Order Merchants (MOTO) Internet Order Merchants, High Risk Credit Card Processor, Off
HTTP Header reponses of credit-card-processing.worldwideoptimize.com is the information we get when HTTP request sent to a server from connecting clients(e.g. chrome, firefox). When you input an address into your browser it sends a request to the server hosting the domain and the server responds. HTTP Header information is not directly displayed by normal web browsers like chrome, firefox etc.
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Tue, 22 Jan 2013 09:59:48 GMT Server: Apache Vary: Accept-Encoding Transfer-Encoding: chunked Content-Type: text/html
DNS Record Analysis
There are total 2 records in domain name system (DNS) of credit-card-processing.worldwideoptimize.com, which includes 1 Address(A) record and 1 Text(TXT) record.
Host Name of the node to which this record pertains
Type Type of resource record in symbolic representation.
IP/Target
TTL Count of seconds that the resource record stays valid.
Extra Info Additional resource record-specific data
credit-card-processing.worldwideoptimize.com
A Address Record: A 32-bit IPv4 address, most commonly used to map hostnames to an IP address of the host, but also used for DNSBLs, storing subnet masks in RFC 1101.
69.89.18.83
14399
credit-card-processing.worldwideoptimize.com
TXT Text Record: Originally for arbitrary human-readable text in a DNS record. Since the early 1990s, however, this record more often carries machine-readable data, such as specified by RFC 1464, opportunistic encryption, Sender Policy Framework, DKIM, DMARC DNS-SD.