The information you exchange on our website is encrypted and therefore unreadable during sending. Hackers therefore have nothing to do with it. How do you see that our website is safe? Our url starts with ‘https: //’. The s stands for ‘secure’, the English word for safe. A lock is visible in the address bar.
In the various internet browsers, these characteristics may look slightly different. One website is best viewed on Firefox, Chrome or Safari, and preferably on the format from an iPad or larger. Naturally, you do not want to view art from a mobile phone.
Chrome
The ‘https:’ section in the URL is green and there is a green lock. You can click on the lock for more information about the set rights of the website and method of security. This is quite technical, but you can see for example whether pop-ups can be shown automatically. By default, pop-ups are blocked. Chrome is standard on the Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 tablet. Here too the green lock and ‘https:’ can be seen.
Firefox
When you click on the lock in the front of the address bar in Firefox, you get the message ‘The connection to this website is protected’ or ‘Secure connection’. Sometimes the lock is green and you can see who the website is from.
Safari
Safari is standard on the iPad and iPhone. In the address bar there is a short version of the URL or whose webpage is. You can see a lock for that. When you tap on the address bar, the complete address appears with ‘https: //’ at the beginning. In Safari on the Mac you can also click on the lock and then on “Show certificate”. You will see a check mark with the message ‘This certificate is valid’.
In the various internet browsers, these characteristics may look slightly different. One website is best viewed on Firefox, Chrome or Safari, and preferably on the format from an iPad or larger. Naturally, you do not want to view art from a mobile phone.
Chrome
The ‘https:’ section in the URL is green and there is a green lock. You can click on the lock for more information about the set rights of the website and method of security. This is quite technical, but you can see for example whether pop-ups can be shown automatically. By default, pop-ups are blocked. Chrome is standard on the Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 tablet. Here too the green lock and ‘https:’ can be seen.
Firefox
When you click on the lock in the front of the address bar in Firefox, you get the message ‘The connection to this website is protected’ or ‘Secure connection’. Sometimes the lock is green and you can see who the website is from.
Safari
Safari is standard on the iPad and iPhone. In the address bar there is a short version of the URL or whose webpage is. You can see a lock for that. When you tap on the address bar, the complete address appears with ‘https: //’ at the beginning. In Safari on the Mac you can also click on the lock and then on “Show certificate”. You will see a check mark with the message ‘This certificate is valid’.