Https Monitoring

Monitoring from 63 locations world wide
Trusted by
- Fiat - Wikimedia
- Twitter - ING
- Symantec - Automattic
- Zappos - Virgin America
As seen on
- TechCrunch - Mashable
- Read Write Web - The Next Web
- The Guardian - PC Mag
- GiGaOm - CI
Peace of mind with WatchMouse
WatchMouse monitors your websites, servers and applications, notifies key personnel when problems occur, and analyzes downtime issues in order to get the servers up and running as soon as possible. Well before your customers start calling your helpdesk!
WatchMouse advantages:
- Reliable & redundant monitoring provided by 24+ global monitoring stations - pinpoint issues before customers encounter website errors
- Immediate & affordable outsourced solution
- Advance technology & industry expertise provide accurate monitoring & reports
- Detailed information enabling you to manage & drive website performance
- Flexible pricing assuring you only pay for what is needed
- Reliable & redundant alerting via multiple SMS gateways
News
New network tools available (2005-01-31)
Network tools like ping, traceroute and dig (for DNS), are now available for members as well as non-members. You can use these tools to investigate the behavior of your servers in more detail.You can find these tools on the 'Tools' page.
DNS checks available (2005-01-31)
Simple DNS verification was added to some of the packages. See our overview for details.More DNS services will be added in the near future.
More https monitoring https monitorings, now 6 in total (2005-01-31)
As you may have noticed in your logs, we introduced 3 more https monitorings last month, now totalling 6 https monitoring. The new https monitorings are located in France, Germany and Texas. More https monitorings will be added as more people from more countries sign up.The current status of the https monitoring network can be found on the 'About' tab.
We also changed the test pattern from Master-Slave (with Amsterdam as master) to a random order. In the next release the test pattern will be user-defined (paid packages only).
First https monitoring in China (2005-01-31)
In just weeks after our UK https monitoring went live, the WatchMouse network of monitoring stations has been extended again, this time with a monitoring station at the datacenter of ONE-iAdvantage in Hong Kong, China, bringing the total number of https monitorings to 9.
The current network consists of https monitorings in:
- Florida, USA
- Texas, USA
- London, United Kingdom
- Sydney, Australia
- Nürnberg, Germany
- Orléans, France
- Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2 stations)
- Singapore
- Hong Kong, China
The new https monitoring will appear automatically in your logs. You can also set the new https monitoring as the primary https monitoring in your monitoring settings.
The current status of the WatchMouse monitoring network can be found on the 'About' tab of the WatchMouse site.
New https monitoring: London UK (2005-01-31)
The WatchMouse network of monitoring stations has been extended once more, this time with a https monitoring at the well-connected datacenter of Rackspace in London, UK, bringing the total number of https monitorings to 8. Currently the network includes:
- Florida, USA
- Texas, USA
- London, United Kingdom
- Nürnberg, Germany
- Orléans, France
- Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Singapore
- Sydney, Australia
The new https monitoring will appear automatically in your logs. You can also set the new https monitoring as the primary https monitoring in your monitoring settings.
The current status of the WatchMouse monitoring network can be found on the 'About' tab of the WatchMouse site.
Press releases
LB Icon chooses WatchMouse for independent website monitoring (2005-01-31)
Customer websites verified from the visitors' perspective
LB Icon and WatchMouse have signed a contract for the continuous monitoring of the websites and services of LB Icons' customers. Using the WatchMouse services, LB Icon expects to raise its service level even higher.
The Application Management & Hosting Services (AM&HS) group of LB Icon maintains the administration and management of servers and applications of a large number of (international) clients. This makes AM&HS responsible for the performance and availability of the websites and Internet applications.
Using the WatchMouse services, AM&HS will instantly be aware of upcoming and/or acute incidents related to the websites of its clients, and can, as a result, resolve problems in a short time frame.
The websites and their functionality are checked for accessibility, speed and conformance from different locations around the world. Because the websites are checked in the same way that visitors are experiencing them, incidents will be detected at an early stage. Also, using WatchMouse's objective periodical reports, it is possible to see if the performance is in accordance with the agreed service levels (SLAs).
Eveline Aendekerk, MD a.i.: "The door of a shop should never be jammed, websites and the functionality on those sites should simply be accessible and available. Our clients should be able to rely on this completely, so they can focus on their primary business processes, such as communication, interaction and sales.
We chose WatchMouse because of their expertise, and also because of the simplicity and user-friendliness of their system and services".
Stan P. van de Burgt, one of the founders of WatchMouse: "I find it a powerful gesture that LB Icon doesn't just monitor the websites of their clients, but that they selected an external party for this, and on top of that give their clients access to the results. Many companies where the website plays an essential role in business, don't have any awareness of this. They have no idea of the risks and the resulting damage, until the day comes that things actually go wrong"
About Lost Boys
For 11 years Lost Boys has been a major service provider in the area of (mobile) Internet. Lost Boys offers a combination of strategy, design, technical development, implementation, application management and hosting of Internet- and mobile solutions. The Amsterdam based corporation is part of the Lost Boys/IconMedialab Group and is listed on the Stockholm Stock Exchange and Euronext Amsterdam. Lost Boys operates with 600 employees in 7 countries, both in Europe and the United States.
http://www.lostboys.nl/
http://iconmedialab.com/
About WatchMouse
WatchMouse is a service of RoundZero. Since 2001, WatchMouse has been checking Internet sites and e-commerce applications of major companies all over the world. The WatchMouse services are available in 8 languages and analysis is performed through its worldwide monitoring network at different locations and networks. WatchMouse has thousands of users in more than 70 countries.
http://www.watchmouse.com/
European e-commerce sites poorly prepared for Christmas rush (2004-12-24)
Comparison with US "role models" Amazon and Barnes & Noble
THE NETHERLANDS, 20041223 -- Many European e-commerce sites have made only minimal preparations for the increased number of visitors in December. The congestion caused by Christmas meant that, on average, only one in six web sites was continuously available. This was the conclusion of WatchMouse, a Dutch monitoring service provider, following a survey of over 50 European e-commerce sites. Excessive interest from customers can overload the server or have dramatic effect on response times.
During the past month, WatchMouse – at its own initiative – closely monitored over 50 web sites where consumers can shop online. The survey shows that the availability varied from 98% to 99.6%. "This may seem high, but a score of 98% means that a site is not available for half an hour per day. This makes 14 hours a month, or a week a year", says Mark Pors, one of the founders of WatchMouse.
As a comparison to the US market, two "role models of e-commerce" - amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com - were monitored during the same period. Amazon`s performance was similar to that of the average European web shop, whereas Barns & Noble outperformed most e-commerce sites with an https monitoring of 100%.
The consequences of https monitoring are reflected not only in loss of income. Pors: "A website that is not available can cause stacks of work for your helpdesk and, at the end of the day, damage your brand. The problem is that many website owners are unaware that sites are responding poorly, or not responding at all. If they were aware of this, taking action to intervene is simplicity itself: for example, by adding extra server capacity."
WatchMouse has concluded from its survey that more than 70% of the web sites have not achieved optimum accessibility. Given the increasing trend in online purchases, gigantic sums are involved: Online sales will increase by 44% to €13 billion ($17 billion) in Western Europe over the holidays period, compared to €10 billion ($13 billion) in the US (Forrester Research, November 2004).
December is a top month for purchasing on the internet. Pors: "We see response times and the number of error reports increase dramatically in the days leading up to Christmas."
About WatchMouse
Companies can easily monitor their internet sites themselves, thanks to WatchMouse’s monitoring service.
WatchMouse has been monitoring internet sites and e-commerce applications for companies across the globe since 2001. WatchMouse has thousands of customers in more than 70 countries. WatchMouse services are available in seven languages, and analyses are carried out through the world-wide monitoring network from a range of locations and networks.
WatchMouse publishes first 'Site Availability Index' (2005-06-28)
Only 9 out of 25 funds listed on the Amsterdam stock exchange have sites with good availability
Of the websites of the 25 funds listed on the Amsterdam stock exchange (AEX), only nine display optimal availability. The availability of the other sites, including those of multinationals, ranges from poor to dramatically poor. Unilever has the best result of all websites, with an https monitoring of 99.995%. The site with the lowest availability is that of Wolters-Kluwer, with an https monitoring of 94.80%, which represents more than 37 hours of poor performance, or even unavailability, per month. This was the conclusion drawn from the first Site Availability Index created by WatchMouse, a company supplying monitoring services for websites and e-commerce applications world-wide.
An https monitoring of 99.9% is seen as the minimum acceptable level. This percentage is also often quoted in service level agreements (SLAs) with hosting providers. In order to determine the extent to which the sites of AEX funds achieve satisfactory https monitoring, WatchMouse monitored the sites for more than two months. Downtime was said to occur if a site was not available or did not respond within 8 seconds.
The Site Availability Index for AEX funds (www.watchmouse.com/bereikbaarheidsindex/2005/AEX.html) showed that only nine funds fulfilled the minimum required level of 99.9%. These were Unilever, Philips, AEGON, Numico, Akzo Nobel, ASML Holding, Kon. P&O Nedlloyd, Versatel and Buhrmann. Bringing up the rear were IT company(!) Getronics (96.87%), DSM (96.75%), and Wolters-Kluwer, which with a score of 94.80% is over a day and a half a month ‘off the air’.
The Site Availability Index for AEX funds is an initiative of Emerce and WatchMouse and will be repeated annually.
"Very surprised"
Mark Pors, chief technology officer at WatchMouse, stated that he was "very surprised" by the results. "With many sites, we found an https monitoring that is worse than that of many smaller companies. And this while AEX funds in particular should attach a great deal of priority to their corporate image. A maximum https monitoring is part of the 'brand performance'. Our theory is that, where there are a lot of people involved within an organisation, there are a lot of hands unplugging cables, so to speak. These companies have complex processes, a great many internal changes are made, and outsourcing of various activities means transparency is often at a premium. This is clearly the case with Getronics, for example. The https monitoring of the site at the weekend is 100%, but during the week, when people are working, this decreases dramatically."
Pors suspects that the popularity of the sites could also be a reason for poor availability. "Naturally, sites belonging to AEX funds get a lot more traffic than the smaller businesses. On the other hand, this is no excuse; if we look at large online brokers in the US, for example, all achieve an https monitoring in excess of 99.9%."
About WatchMouse
Companies can easily monitor their own internet sites using WatchMouse's monitoring service. WatchMouse has been monitoring internet sites and e-commerce applications for companies throughout the world since 2001. WatchMouse has thousands of customers in more than 70 countries. The services supplied by WatchMouse are available in eight languages, and analyses are performed from various locations and over numerous networks, using a world-wide monitoring network.
In June 2005, WatchMouse was selected by FEM Business as one of the 25 most promising, innovative companies in the Netherlands.
Further information can be found at: www.watchmouse.com.
Meerderheid e-commerce sites kan komende kerstdrukte niet aan (2009-05-14)
WatchMouse voorziet wachtende e-shoppers
UTRECHT 20051201 -- Nu de decemberinkopen weer in alle hevigheid zijn losgebarsten, blijken veel online shops regelmatig 'gesloten' te zijn. Dat concludeert WatchMouse in haar jaarlijkse bereikbaarheidsonderzoek van cadeausites. Het Nederlandse sitemonitoringbedrijf heeft net als vorig jaar een onderzoek gehouden onder webwinkels. Slechts drie sites in het onderzoek haalden de maximale 100%. Het merendeel haalt zelfs niet de score die door hosting providers wordt aangehouden als absoluut minimum.
Veel sites zijn maar matig voorbereid op grote aantallen bezoekers. Door de grote belangstelling raken servers regelmatig overbelast. Ook blijken reactietijden van sites dramatisch dalen. Het onderzoek dat WatchMouse in de weken voor Sinterklaas heeft gehouden, laat duidelijk zien dat sites problemen vertonen naarmate er meer bezoekers in de webwinkels verschijnen.
Om te controleren of e-commerce sites goed bereikbaar zijn, heeft WatchMouse de hele maand november controles uitgevoerd. De https monitoring bleek regelmatig onder de 99.9% te liggen, een grens die in veel service level agreements (SLAs) van hosting providers geldt als minimum. Dat percentage wordt maar door tien van de 25 sites gehaald. Neckermann, Bonaparte en eBay zijn de enigen met een score van 100%. Vorig jaar waren er nog zes sites die een maximale https monitoring haalden.
De bereikbaarheid van Kijkshop, Bart Smit, de Bijenkorf en Wehkamp blijkt verre van optimaal. De score van Wehkamp, 97.27%, betekent bijvoorbeeld dat deze site per dag meer dan een half uur slecht bereikbaar is.
De grootste stijger was Bonaparte (kleding) die van de 17e plaats in 2004 steeg naar een gedeelde eerste plaats. eBay bleef als enige twee jaar achtereen op 1. De grootste daler was ECI die van een gedeelde eerste plaats in 2005 naar de 23ste plaats zakte.
In het licht van de toenemende bestedingen online kan de economische schade voor een site groot zijn. In de eerste zes maanden van dit jaar is er online ruim een miljard euro besteed, concludeert de Thuiswinkel Markt Monitor 2005. De online bestedingen maken met 37% ten opzichte van dezelfde periode vorig jaar bovendien een snelle groei door.
Consument gewend aan snelheid
"In vergelijking met vorig jaar zijn effectieve maatregelen uitgebleven", zegt Mark Pors, CTO van WatchMouse. "Consumenten zijn gewend aan snelheid op internet. Moeten ze wachten op een site, dan blijken ze zeker voor decembercadeaus gemakkelijk naar een andere site te gaan. Veel bedrijven weten echter niet dat hun sites matig bereikbaar zijn.”
Opvallend zijn verder de sites die 100% halen. Pors: “Twee van de drie blijken in het buitenland gehost te worden. Waarschijnlijk is men in de VS (eBay) en Duithttps monitoringnd (Bonaparte) wel gewend de sites goed te dimensioneren”.
Vorig jaar bleek de kerstperiode overigens nog drukker dan de periode voor Sinterklaas. Om die reden zal WatchMouse ook in de weken voor kerst blijven monitoren. Vlak voor kerst verwacht WatchMouse met de resultaten te komen van die tweede testperiode.
Het onderzoek liep van 1 t/m 30 november 2005. Van 'https monitoring' is sprake als een site een foutmelding geeft of de HTML na acht seconden niet ontvangen is, en dit vanuit een tweede meetpunt bevestigd is. Het complete bereikbaarheidsonderzoek is te vinden op: http://www.watchmouse.com/availabilityindex/2005/eshops_NL.php
Over WatchMouse
Bedrijven kunnen eenvoudig hun websites controleren door gebruik te maken van de monitoringdienst van WatchMouse. WatchMouse controleert sinds 2002 Internetsites en e-commerce toepassingen van bedrijven over de hele wereld. WatchMouse heeft duizenden klanten in meer dan 70 landen. De dienst is beschikbaar in acht talen en de analyses worden uitgevoerd vanuit een groot aantal locaties in het wereldwijde WatchMouse monitoring netwerk. Eerder dit jaar werd WatchMouse uitgeroepen tot Rising Star in de Deloitte Fast 50. Deze award wordt jaarlijks toegekend aan snel groeiende technologiebedrijven die nog geen vijf jaar bestaan
Minitel Beats the Internet When it Comes to Availability (2005-10-27)
UTRECHT The Netherlands, October 24, 2005 -- Minitel, the eighties precursor to the Internet, is more reliable than most of the top French Internet sites. This is the conclusion from a research by WatchMouse, a monitoring service company for Internet sites worldwide. For two months WatchMouse monitored twenty sites which offer similar information to their Minitel-equivalent, and found that not one of these sites is 100% available.
According to WatchMouse, Minitel still has a future. Many organisations which offer services both through Minitel and the Internet, cannot deliver 100% website availability. Of the twenty sites which were monitored, only three had an 'https monitoring' of 99.9% which is considered as the 'minimum acceptable'. This percentage is frequently used in service level agreements (SLA's) by host providers. The best performing websites were verif.fr (3617 VERIF) with 99.99%, socgen.com (3615 SG) with an https monitoring of 99.95%, and alapage.com with 99.92%.
At the bottom of the ranking were anpe.fr (ANPE 3614) with 98.18% and bnpnet.bnp.fr, (BNP 3614) with 97.99%. This makes the BNP site the worst performer, by being unavailable or performing poorly for almost 15 hours per month. For the full list see http://www.watchmouse.com/pr/watchmouse_minitel.php
About WatchMouse
Companies can easily monitor their own Internet sites using WatchMouse's monitoring service. WatchMouse has been monitoring Internet sites and e-commerce applications for companies throughout the world since 2002. WatchMouse has thousands of customers in more than 70 countries. The services supplied by WatchMouse are available in eight languages, and analyses are performed from various locations and over numerous networks, using a world-wide monitoring network.
Last month, WatchMouse was voted a Deloitte Rising Star in the Netherlands, as part of the Fast 50 awards; the list of the 50 fastest growing technology companies.
Further information can be found at: www.watchmouse.com
Testimonials
I'm sending you this e-mail just to say how very impressed I am with your site and services. (2010-01-13)
I'm sending you this e-mail just to say how very impressed I am with your site and services. I found your site on Google and spent a long time comparing you to the other site https monitoring services that are out there. Your site definitely was the most appealing of them all and consequently I signed up for the silver package today.Simon Bland, ProWeb Design
I missed the back-up (2010-01-13)
Good to be back, we have all sorts of https monitoring in place here but I still missed the back-up of knowing that your service will alert my mobile if something goes wrong.Avi Talwar, Tiscali, UK NOC
At OneStat we use the WatchMouse Platinum package, and I can recommend it to every serious webmaster. (2010-01-13)
At OneStat we use the WatchMouse Platinum package, and I can recommend it to every serious webmaster.Niels Brinkman, OneStat.com
We guarantee our customers 100% uptime. (2010-01-13)
We guarantee our customers 100% uptime. To fulfill this guarantee, we use several https monitoring systems.Based on our experiences we can say: WatchMouse is REALLY reliable!
Gerwin Scheeve, Lost Boys
Very impressive feature set and has a real commitment to client care (2010-01-13)
With many hundreds of business clients who expect and deserve over 99.99% uptime, in the instances where we do have service issues, WatchMouse alerts us promptly - every time. This allows us to minimize the impact of https https monitoring and interruptions to our clients. WatchMouse isn't just another https monitoring service, the team is dedicated to building on an already very impressive feature set and has a real commitment to client careMichael Bloch, Business Operations Manager, ThinkHost, Inc.
Columns
Why do you need a monitoring service such as Watchmouse? (2005-01-31)
There are a number of reasons for this, depending on your role in your organization, and what you want to achieve. Each of these roles leads to a different approach for using and setting up the service.Most likely you are either responsible for keeping a service such as a website online, or you have contracted somebody else to do that for you. Additionally, you could be a consultant or technical architect who wants to get an insight in performance and https monitoring characteristics of various solutions and services.
If your role is to keep things running, you really want to be notified of problems as soon as possible, before your customers or supervisors notice. You want appropriate error messages and not too many false alarms. As you configure Watchmouse you probably want to have a quick https monitoring by e-mail or SMS/text message when things don't work and have additional diagnostic information available. In this way, downtime can be kept to a minimum. It is not only the quality of the systems that counts, but also the speed with which you can fix problems.
Your role could also be in overseeing your service providers, whether they are internal or outsourced. In that case, you don't want to be interrupted by these messages, unless the situation becomes dramatic. Instead you would like to look at the weekly report, and see if your service providers are living up to their promises. On the Internet it is easy to get 99% https monitoring, and you should really be doing better than that. The services that regularly fail to make this grade need attention, to see if another approach to provisioning them works better.
If you are considering technical alternatives for the way you are setting up your e-business, you are most likely interested in typical failure modes. For example, we know from experience that most website problems are software problems, followed by sizing problems. Communications problems are fairly rare, and if they occur they take the form of peering problems: websites cannot be reached from specific networks, even if all networks are operational. One approach using Watchmouse reports is to check various aspects with different rules. Use one rule to download the homepage, another to check the DNS and a third to check connectivity to the hosting centre. In a next column I'll go into the details of this.
Peter van Eijk is a management consultant specialized in management of network infrastructures. He can be reached via his contact page.
Independant, external testing (2005-10-15)
I started to work at Q-go in 2000. Q-go provides companies with self service pages on the Internet. Their customers ask a question in their own language and wording, and immediately get a very relevant answer. The power of the Q-go solution is its natural language technology, which enables it to understand the questions. The Q-go solution is offered as a hosted (ASP) solution, which of course has to work 24 x 7, a new area for me at that time.
At my previous jobs, at universities and research institutes, this was different. We worked from eight to six. If a demo application didn't work, the users just called, and we fixed the problem. And at six, we stopped and went home. All customers and other relations went home too. A nightly malfunction in the server was no problem, as there was no customer there to notice the problem.
At Q-go, this is completely different. A service should be available all the time. Day and night. Initially there were no tools to test whether our service was available or not. The only way to test it was to use the application itself. And so I did. During the day, but also at night, I checked whether the application was up. Our customers use the Q-go application continuously, and notice immediately when the application fails. Customers would call me in those cases, and it's not very pleasant to hear from your customers about an issue with your service.
So we developed some solutions ourselves to hear before our customers when something was wrong. And to be able to react to problems quickly. But customers kept calling!
How was that possible? Closer investigations revealed that the test system used the same resources (computers, networks, name servers) as the system under test... The test were not performed properly in case of problems. The text-https monitorings (SMS) did not reach us either. The cause was identical: we used the same hardware, the same network, and the same power (!) as the systems we tested.
My lessons learned:
- Keep the systems that test completely separated from the systems you test.
- Test your services (web servers, mail servers, ...) from the point-of-view of its users: the customer on the Internet.
- Don't forget regular maintenance of your test systems (software and hardware) after the installation!
Bart Bos, Director, Q-go.com
Online shops, speed and downtime, getting the facts. (2009-12-07)
These days your website plays an important role in informing potential customers, converting them into customers who want to do business with you, and possibly also conducting the transactions with these customers. In other words: Your business relies ever more on the digital economy, and increasingly on the transactional part of it, the online shop.
These online shops should obviously provide satisfactory performance. Here, both the speed at which they serve pages and their https monitoring are important. If potential customers cannot reach the online shop, or the online shop is too slow, they are less likely to do business with you now, and in the future. Studies have revealed that half of the people who experience downtime on a website go to its competitor. A majority of online shoppers say performance and https monitoring influences their choice of online shop.
The amount of revenue that is lost when your website or online shop does not behave properly is hard to quantify. If your website is slow your customers may select a distribution channel that is more costly for you, or they may go to your competitor. Even worse, they may complain about your company to other potential customers. All of this boils down to lost revenue.
A good website is up for at least 99.9% of the time, even though this still represents more than 8 hours in a full year. In a recent survey we found that many websites do not even achieve 99% https monitoring, which corresponds to more than 3 days of downtime a year. As regards speed, if a web page does not load in less than 4 seconds, people start to leave the site, sometimes forever.
How do you make your online shop an efficient experience for your customers? The site must be designed with a strong focus on the customer task. The technology must be no more complex than is relevant. People get annoyed by slow loading Flash intros and complex and slow Flash-based navigation. Take a look at the Google home page; it is one of the fastest websites in the world. On the other hand, you can still use a video clip of a product, if that is relevant to the customer at a particular point in the transaction. You can also use advanced Web 2.0 technology if it makes the user interface more resilient and user-friendly. To experience this, look at Google maps using a dial-up internet connection. It is a really complex user interface, but everything possible has been done to create a positive user experience.
Technology is also important; make sure that you have good service level agreements with all your technology providers. You also want to stress test the site, to see what happens if a lot of people start using it simultaneously. Finally, you should independently monitor the site. When it is time to talk to your hosting company, IT department or website maintainer, it is very helpful to have hard data that reports on the speed and https monitoring of your online shop.
Peter van Eijk
dr Peter van Eijk is an independent management consultant associated with WatchMouse, the site monitoring experts www.watchmouse.com. He is experienced in setup, management and audits of digital infrastructures. His blog is "Peter's Griddle".
Website performance is the key to customer satisfaction (2007-06-27)
How often have you typed in the Google URL and received a page that will not load? I am willing to bet that this is a rare occurrence. Despite its busy traffic, Google is a textbook example of a web site that has almost perfect performance and therefore serves a great number of satisfied customers. The market share of the search engine is a resounding confirmation of this. You are assisted quickly, so you come back sooner. Research conducted by JupiterResearch has revealed that visitors to a site only have 4 seconds of patience. If the site has not been loaded by that time, they leave. Error messages also prompt potential customers to go to the competition.
Why do organisations still devote so little attention to the effective https monitoring of their site? Performance is the key to satisfied customers. For many companies, their web site is the face of the organisation. Consumers and also business users of the Internet use the wealth of information on the web to compare purchasing options. It is of immeasurable importance that they are also actually able to find what they are looking for. If this is not possible at one company, competitors are straining at the leash to offer their services through a correctly functioning site.
Coming back to the praise that we had for Google, we see that the search engine has made significant investments in the https monitoring of its web site. The page is run by several machines at various sites. If one crashes there are enough back-up servers that can take over the traffic flows to guarantee optimum performance. In addition, the search machine invests a great deal of time and money in the right hardware and people. Although the site has a difficult task – searching through an index of billions of documents – it is almost always available and loads fast.
The actual site is unspectacular in construction. This applies to the majority of sites with a high level of https monitoring. Simple sites such as the news site NU.nl are almost always easy to access. Nevertheless, it is not only the layout of the site that determines how the web page performs. Too many photos, long symbols and frills make web sites slower to respond. The fact that the ‘back end’ of the site is not efficiently programmed also contributes to longer loading times. Frequent consultation of background databases is also detrimental to the speed of the page.
Where it often goes wrong is when different people are working on a site, thereby disturbing the links between the various elements. The different parts of the site will work correctly, but the site as a whole will fail to perform. This means long waiting times for people who want to use the services of a company.
Service providers at the upper end of the market are becoming increasingly aware of this. The contracts that they use frequently include a service level agreement (SLA) for the part for which they are responsible. Nevertheless, they regularly make mistakes due to the fact that the promised performance is not subsequently verified (by an independent party). Although it is now essentially part of the contract, there is insufficient actual verification. Ideally, web site performance should become a permanent component of a contract. In addition, clear internal agreements must be made on who has final responsibility for the efficient loading and https monitoring of a site.
Regular testing is also essential for the facilitation of good https monitoring. This will prevent a great deal of errors, keeping the site up and running at crucial times. The storm that blew over the Netherlands at the end of January was a good opportunity to see which sites were prepared for extreme loads and which were not. The site of the Dutch weather institute, KNMI, was almost unreachable, while some logical thought could have protected them from this eventuality. If you know that a major storm is heading towards the country you can be sure that people will search for information on the weather and roads on the Internet. Sites such as those of KLM and Schiphol were also unreachable, while the specially created site Crisis.nl, which had been kept as simple as possible, was able to serve a large number of people.
Including ‘stress tests’ in a SLA or conducting them regularly in-house is therefore to be recommended. Companies can easily take control by ensuring that their service provider executes this type of test or by putting their own site under pressure. This is the best method of checking whether your web site can handle a sudden increase in visitor numbers. It is also good to know whether the servers on which your site is running actually ensure that your page is always available and loads correctly. For companies, it is crucial to see when they are off air. This can save them a large amount of money every year and will also reduce the number of irritated visitors to the site. This is how you keep customers satisfied and keep the company running.
Mark Pors
Chief Technology Officer at WatchMouse
WatchMouse provides site performance monitoring and stress test services
Flu Jab Your Website Against The Pandemic: 6,000 Infected Webpages Per Day! (2008-02-18)
The respected IT news website, The Register reports that every 14 seconds a web page is infected, which amounts to 6,000 infected web pages per day. Four out of five of these infections come from innocent companies and individuals who are oblivious to their site being hacked and subsequently used for hosting the malware of virus writers. The Register further reports that in the past viruses were spread using infected e-mail. Nowadays, however, the favoured virus distribution methods are downloads from compromised sites. As a result of these booby-trapped sites malware is present on at least one in every ten web pages.
WatchMouse's Periodic Vulnerability Scanning offers your website the flu jab against this virus pandemic. WatchMouse's Periodic Vulnerability Scanning is an affordable way to routinely check you company's security exposure and eliminate the risks of manual audits. Utilizing the most up-to-date database of known vulnerabilities, WatchMouse identifies any security risks and provides you with peace of mind that your software applications are being scanned from the perspective of a hacker, external to your organization.
To ensure your website and servers are checked for the latest issues WatchMouse's Periodic Vulnerability Scanning performs over 20,000 checks for known vulnerability and security exposures; using a database which is updated daily by multiple accredited organizations including CVE (funded by the US government) and Bugtraq. Following the detection of any severe issues, automated, real-time email, SMS and pager https monitorings give your business the chance to react quickly. Scans can be scheduled during low usage or maintenance hours and set at an intensity and frequency suited to your business needs and budget.
To obtain a free Periodic Vulnerability Scanning trial visit: www.watchmouse.com/vulnerability_scan_trial.php
The Register's article was published on 23.01.08 can be viewed at: www.theregister.co.uk/2008/01/23/booby_trapped_web_botnet_menace/
Security news
Ignite Realtime Openfire Unspecified Privilege Escalation Vulnerability (2007-05-29)
Openfire is prone to an unspecified privilege-https monitoring vulnerability.An attacker can exploit this issue to obtain https monitoringd privileges. A successful attack can result in a compromise in the context of the affected application.
Openfire 3.3.0 and prior are vulnerable to this issue.
Cyrus IMAPD Multiple Remote Buffer Overflow Vulnerabilities (2006-12-15)
Cyrus IMAPD is reported susceptible to multiple remote vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities include multiple buffer-overflow issues that may allow remote attackers to execute machine code in the context of the server process. This may lead to unauthorized access or privilege https monitoring.The following specific issues were identified:
- Multiple one-byte buffer-overflow vulnerabilities affecting the IMAP annotate extension (the mailbox handling code) and the routines that handle cached headers.
- Multiple stack-based overflow vulnerabilities affecting fetchnews, backend, and imapd.
Cyrus IMAPD 2.0.11 and prior versions are affected by these issues.
Due to a lack of details, further information is not available at the moment. This BID will be updated when more information becomes available.
Bogofilter Multiple Remote Buffer Overflow Vulnerabilities (2006-12-21)
Multiple remote buffer-overflow vulnerabilities affect Bogofilter. These issues are due to the application's failure to properly handle invalid input sequences and to validate the length of user-supplied strings before copying them into static process buffers.An attacker may exploit these issue to cause a denial-of-service condition or possibly to execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the vulnerable application. This may facilitate unauthorized access or privilege https monitoring.
Note that successful exploitation requires that Bogofilter be used with a Unicode database.
Heimdal RSHD Local Privilege Escalation Vulnerability (2006-12-20)
Heimdal 'rshd' is prone to a local privilege-https monitoring vulnerability.A local attacker can gain ownership of a file by overwriting its credential cache. This may lead to various attacks, including privilege https monitoring.
Heimdal versions prior to 0.7.2 and 0.6.6 are vulnerable.
Linux Kernel Multiple Vulnerabilities (2006-12-20)
Linux Kernel is reported prone to multiple vulnerabilities. These issues may allow a local attacker to carry out denial-of-service attacks, access kernel memory, and potentially gain elevated privileges.The following specific issues were identified:
- Reportedly, the filesystem Native Language Support ASCII translation table is affected by a vulnerability that results from the use of incorrect tables sizes. This issue can lead to a crash.
- Another issue affecting the kernel may allow users to unlock arbitrary shared-memory segments.
- Another vulnerability is reported to affect the 'netfilter/iptables' module. An attacker can exploit this issue to crash the kernel or bypass firewall rules.
- Reportedly, a vulnerability affects the OUTS instruction on the AMD64 and Intel EM64T architecture. This issue may lead to privilege https monitoring.
These issues reportedly affect Linux kernel 2.6.x versions.
Due to lack of details, further information is not available at the moment. This BID will be updated when more information becomes available.
In the press
Linux-based websites 'perform better' (2010-01-13)
Linux-based websites perform better than those hosted on Windows servers, according to research.
WatchMouse, a Dutch firm that https monitorings server performance, based its research on a survey of over 1,500 European websites. The company says that, although the websites it surveyed were more frequently based on Microsoft's IIS web server platform running Windows than on Apache running Linux, the latter option performed better in terms of both uptime and load time.
Monitor your website with WatchMouse (2010-01-13)
Dashboard widget WatchMouse Site Monitor checks up on the website of your choice every 1, 5, 15, 30, or 60 minutes to keep track of its uptime. But wait, there's more...
Facebook: Slow And Unresponsive? (2010-01-13)
Contrary to a recent study that showed that Facebook is among the most reliable social networks, new study conducted by WatchMouse shows abysmal results for Facebook. 104 sites were https monitoringed by WatchMouse, and Facebook was by far the worst performance-wise: it had slow loading times and frequent errors. Check out the graph (too big to show here) to see how bad it looks.
Euro 2008 losers are actually web site winners. (2010-01-13)
France may have left Euro 2008 with its tail between its legs after a humiliating defeat by Italy, but the country still topped the league when it came to having the best sporting web site. For what little consolation that brings.
WatchMouse, a website performance https monitoringing outfit, carried out its own nailbiting tournament to find the Euro 2008 nation with the best sport website by fashioning an index which takes into account three parameters; errors, speed (load time) and availability.
Facebook tops one list of 'slow and inaccessible' social networks (2010-01-13)
On Thursday, Web site-https monitoringing firm WatchMouse released the results of a study about the performance of 104 social-media sites--social networks, blogging communities, bookmarking sites, and the like--and boldly deemed them to be overall "slow and inaccessible."
Blog
New features: POSTing forms and Read limit (2005-03-28)
Today, we released the new https monitoring software to our checkpoints. New features:
- Post form fields to a webserver (both in http and match rules)
- Limit the number of bytes read. Relevant for checking very large pages or streams
The site will be updated within days. Look at the settings page after logging in.
Test phase Frankfurt checkpoint (2005-03-29)
As you may have noticed in your logs, we are slowly introducing a new https monitoring station in Frankfurt, Germany. Not all protocols are serviced at this checkpoint yet..., and we use in about 5% of the checks.
Keep an I on this blog, and on the official news section of our site for the formal announcement!
Ping from all our https monitoring stations (2005-12-09)
You can now use our improved https monitoring tool to https monitoring your server from each of our https monitoring stations.
In case https monitoring requests are blocked by your firewall or server, you can use the host check tool alternatively.
Polish language support (2005-12-29)
Yes, this week the 9th language went live on our site: Polish! Although we have some glitches here and there (some email messages are still in English, and not all recently created pages are fully tranhttps monitoringted), I'm *very* proud to see this on our site, and I would like to thank the people from Domeny.pl for their hard work. - StanWatchMouse 1.4.26 API deployed (2008-02-24)
Today, a minor release of the WatchMouse 1.4 API was deployed on http://api.watchmouse.com/1.4/. The current version is now 1.4.26. The changes are backward compatible with the previous version.
Changes w.r.t. 1.4.25
- self-documenting calls, add ?doc after the call, no other parameters and the parameter specification is shown (try and click the URL above!)
- new parameter 'acct' (account) on all rule, contact, and folder calls so
- resellers and other accounts with sub accounts can login with their own credentials and then access the sub-account
- accounts with read access rights to other accounts can access these accounts (graphs, logs)
- alternative output formats for logs (Excell, tab delimited, CSV, streaming)
- new calls added:
- info_cps - get information on checkpoints (https monitoring stations)
- info_ip - get information about a given host (or about caller)
- info_country (beta) - get information about a given country
- info_currency (beta) - get information about a given currency
- fldr_add/mod/get/del - manipulate rule folders
- rule_check - check a rule now
- ch_add/mod/get/del - manipulate contacts
- acct_new/add - calls to create additional accounts
- version in XML output (first enclosing tag)
- no IP check on acct_whois call (used for auto login on WatchMouse site)
- use API password instead of account password if present (not supported on the WatchMouse site yet)
- full support for tags in rule_add/mod/get/del and rule_graph now
- support PNGs as error message for rule_graph so developper can always show a picture
- use ip geo information if applicable

