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WebForensik

Results for https://www.horsch.com/us/home

Scan time: 2026-05-30 03:34:14

75

Overall Score

Score history for this domain View full history →

GDPR Summary

⚠ This website needs improvement regarding data protection.

GDPR Issues Detected (1):

⚠ No Content Security Policy — increased risk of cross-site scripting (XSS) and data theft.

Note: This automated analysis does not replace legal advice. For a complete GDPR assessment, consult a data protection officer.

↓ See detailed results for each category below.

Show:
100 HTTPS / Encryption

The website uses an encrypted connection (HTTPS).

Latest encryption active (TLS 1.3 — TLSv1.3).

The security certificate is valid (expires 2026-07-21).

Strong encryption method (TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384, 256 bit).

100 Enforced Encryption (HSTS)

HSTS is enabled — the browser is instructed to always use the encrypted connection.

HSTS duration: 31536000 seconds (at least 1 year) — very good.

HSTS also applies to all subdomains (includeSubDomains).

HSTS preload is enabled — browsers know about the encryption before the first visit.

0 Content Security Policy (CSP)

No Content Security Policy (CSP) found. The website has no protection against injected malicious code.

☛ Action needed: Set up a Content Security Policy. This protects your visitors from injected malicious code (Cross-Site Scripting/XSS). Start with a simple policy: Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'. Your web developer or hosting provider can help.
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

A Content Security Policy (CSP) is a doorkeeper rule for the browser: "Scripts and styles may only be loaded from these allowed sources." Without CSP, injected malicious code (XSS) can freely fetch anything. Start with a simple, secure baseline.

Apache server (classic hosting at most providers)

File: .htaccess in the web root

<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always set Content-Security-Policy "default-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' https: data:; object-src 'none'; frame-ancestors 'self'; base-uri 'self'"
</IfModule>

⚠ This policy is intentionally pragmatic (allows inline styles since many themes/plugins rely on them). If something breaks after enabling: F12 → Console shows "Refused to load…" — add the affected domain after script-src / img-src.

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

Option 1: via .htaccess (recommended — no theme editing)

File: .htaccess in the WordPress root

# BEGIN WebForensik CSP
<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always set Content-Security-Policy "default-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' https: data:; object-src 'none'; frame-ancestors 'self'; base-uri 'self'"
</IfModule>
# END WebForensik CSP

⚠ WordPress often loads external scripts (Google Fonts, jQuery CDN, analytics pixel) — if CSP blocks them: open the console, see which domain is blocked, append that domain to "script-src 'self'" separated by a space.

Option 2: via functions.php in the child theme (Advanced alternative)

File: functions.php of your CHILD theme

add_action('send_headers', function () {
    header("Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' https: data:; object-src 'none'; frame-ancestors 'self'; base-uri 'self'");
});

⚠ If unsure: start with "Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only" (only monitor, don’t block), watch violations in the console, then switch to enforced mode.

✓ How to verify it works: Open page, F12 → Console — no red "Refused to load…" messages. Network tab → first request → Response Header "content-security-policy" visible.

↓ SHOW COMPLETE SOLUTION All missing security headers bundled at the end of the report — ready to copy.
100 Referrer Policy

Referrer-Policy: same-origin (via HTTP-Header).

Strict setting "same-origin" — no path leak, no HTTP downgrade leak. Best practice.

100 MIME Type Protection

MIME type protection active (nosniff) — browsers will not misinterpret files.

100 Clickjacking Protection

Clickjacking protection active: X-Frame-Options = SAMEORIGIN.

0 Permissions (Camera, Microphone, etc.)

No Permissions-Policy set. Third-party scripts could access camera, microphone, or location.

☛ Action needed: Set a Permissions-Policy to control access to camera, microphone, and location. GDPR-relevant: Without this setting, third-party scripts could silently access sensitive device features. Example: Permissions-Policy: camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=()
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

Permissions-Policy controls whether scripts (including third-party) may access camera, microphone, location, motion sensors etc. GDPR-relevant because sensitive device APIs can otherwise be reached unnoticed.

Apache server (classic hosting at most providers)

File: .htaccess in the web root

<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always set Permissions-Policy "camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), accelerometer=(), gyroscope=(), magnetometer=(), interest-cohort=()"
</IfModule>

⚠ "()" at the end means: no caller (not even your own page) may use this API. If you need geolocation (e.g. a map feature): use geolocation=(self) instead of geolocation=(). "interest-cohort=()" disables Google’s FLoC tracking.

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

Option 1: via .htaccess (recommended — no theme editing)

File: .htaccess in the WordPress root

<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always set Permissions-Policy "camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), interest-cohort=()"
</IfModule>

⚠ Standard WordPress needs none of these APIs. If you use a plugin that needs the camera (QR scanner, video upload), set that API to "(self)".

Option 2: via functions.php in the child theme (Advanced alternative)

File: functions.php of your CHILD theme

add_action('send_headers', function () {
    header('Permissions-Policy: camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), interest-cohort=()');
});

⚠ Back up functions.php before edits.

✓ How to verify it works: F12 → Network → Response Header: "permissions-policy" visible.

↓ SHOW COMPLETE SOLUTION All missing security headers bundled at the end of the report — ready to copy.
75 Cookies

2 first-party and 0 third-party cookie(s).

2 of 2 cookie(s) without Secure flag — sent over unencrypted connections too.

☛ Action needed: Set the Secure flag for all cookies. Without it, cookies are also sent over unencrypted HTTP connections and can be intercepted. Your web developer can change this in the cookie configuration.
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

Cookies without the "Secure" flag are also sent over unencrypted HTTP — and can be intercepted by anyone on the same WLAN. There’s no reason to omit Secure on HTTPS-only sites.

Apache server (classic hosting at most providers)

File: .htaccess in the web root

<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; Secure" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*Secure*')"
</IfModule>

⚠ This header appends "; Secure" to cookies that don’t have it yet. Requires Apache 2.4+. The cleaner fix is to correct the code that sets the cookie (PHP: session.cookie_secure=1 in php.ini, or setcookie() with "secure" => true).

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

Option 2: via functions.php in the child theme (Advanced alternative)

File: functions.php of your CHILD theme

add_filter('secure_logged_in_cookie', '__return_true');
add_action('init', function () {
    if (!headers_sent()) {
        @ini_set('session.cookie_secure', '1');
        @ini_set('session.cookie_httponly', '1');
        @ini_set('session.cookie_samesite', 'Lax');
    }
});

⚠ Sets the Secure flag for WordPress login cookies and PHP session cookies. Plugins that set their own cookies must be configured separately (check plugin settings).

WordPress plugin: Plugins that set cookies (cache, anti-spam, A/B testing) often have toggles like "Secure cookies" or "HTTPS only" in their settings.

✓ How to verify it works: F12 → Application → Cookies → your-domain.com. The "Secure" column should show a checkmark for every cookie.

2 of 2 cookie(s) without HttpOnly flag — could be read by malicious code.

☛ Action needed: Set the HttpOnly flag for all cookies that are not needed by JavaScript. This protects against session data theft through malicious code.
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

Cookies without the "HttpOnly" flag can be read by JavaScript — an XSS attacker can steal session cookies and impersonate the logged-in user. Set HttpOnly for all cookies JavaScript doesn’t actively need.

Apache server (classic hosting at most providers)

File: .htaccess in the web root

<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; HttpOnly" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*HttpOnly*')"
</IfModule>

⚠ Cleaner: set cookies with HttpOnly directly (PHP: setcookie(..., [..., 'httponly'=>true])). Exception: cookies that JS actively reads (e.g. some consent cookies).

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

Option 2: via functions.php in the child theme (Advanced alternative)

File: functions.php of your CHILD theme (or better wp-config.php)

@ini_set('session.cookie_httponly', '1');
@ini_set('session.cookie_secure', '1');

⚠ WordPress login cookies have been HttpOnly since 2.x. If you use a plugin that sets session cookies (e.g. WooCommerce cart pre-login), check its settings.

✓ How to verify it works: F12 → Application → Cookies → "HttpOnly" column shows checkmarks everywhere (except for deliberately JS-readable cookies like the consent cookie).

1 of 2 cookie(s) without SameSite protection — sent with requests from other websites.

☛ Action needed: Set the SameSite attribute (Lax or Strict) for all cookies. This prevents cookies from being sent with requests from other websites (CSRF protection).
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

Without "SameSite" cookies are sent on requests from foreign sites — the basis of CSRF attacks (a foreign page silently triggers actions in your name because the login cookie travels along). Set SameSite=Lax as a minimum.

Apache server (classic hosting at most providers)

File: .htaccess in the web root

<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; SameSite=Lax" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*SameSite*')"
</IfModule>

⚠ SameSite=Lax is a good default. Strict is safer but breaks external links (user clicks from Google to your site — cookies are NOT sent, login is lost). None allows cross-site but requires "; Secure".

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

Option 2: via functions.php in the child theme (Advanced alternative)

File: wp-config.php (above "/* That’s all, stop editing! */")

@ini_set('session.cookie_samesite', 'Lax');
@ini_set('session.cookie_secure', '1');
@ini_set('session.cookie_httponly', '1');

⚠ Sets SameSite/Secure/HttpOnly for PHP session cookies. WordPress login cookies have been SameSite=Lax since WP 6.2. Update older versions!

✓ How to verify it works: F12 → Application → Cookies → "SameSite" column should show "Lax" or "Strict" everywhere, not empty.

First-party cookies (from the website itself)

Name Domain Encrypted Server only SameSite
preferedLanguage www.horsch.com No No None
mtm_consent_removed www.horsch.com No No Lax
↓ SHOW COMPLETE SOLUTION All missing security headers bundled at the end of the report — ready to copy.
100 Local Storage (Web Storage)

No local storage (Web Storage) used — no tracking risk.

100 Third-Party Requests

No third-party requests detected — all content comes from the website's own server.

100 Tracker Detection

No known trackers detected.

100 External Resource Integrity (SRI)

No external scripts or stylesheets loaded.

50 DNS Security

No CAA records. Any certificate authority could issue a certificate for this domain.

☛ Action needed: Create CAA DNS records to specify which certificate authorities may issue certificates for your domain. This prevents unauthorized certificates from being issued.
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

CAA records (Certification Authority Authorization) define in DNS which Certificate Authorities are allowed to issue certificates for your domain. Without a CAA record an attacker could request a fraudulent certificate for your domain at any CA. CAA is pure DNS configuration — set in your registrar/DNS-panel, NOT in WordPress.

☞ Concrete CAA values for the ten most common DACH-region hosts

Find your host in the table, copy the values to your DNS panel. For multi-CA hosts: one separate CAA record per CA (all with tag issue, flag 0, name @). Additionally recommended: an iodef record with a contact email for abuse reports.

#HostCA(s) usedCAA value(s) — tag issue
1Hetzner Webhosting (basic certificate, free in package)DigiCert (programme „Encryption Everywhere")digicert.com
1Hetzner Webhosting (Let’s Encrypt, free)Let’s Encrypt (ISRG)letsencrypt.org
2All-InklLet’s Encrypt + Sectigo (Pro)letsencrypt.org
sectigo.com
3IONOS (1&1)DigiCert (GeoTrust) + Let’s Encryptdigicert.com
letsencrypt.org
4STRATOSectigo + Let’s Encryptsectigo.com
letsencrypt.org
5Cloudflare (Universal SSL)Google Trust Services + DigiCert + Let’s Encryptpki.goog
digicert.com
letsencrypt.org
6AWS (ACM / CloudFront)Amazon Trust Servicesamazon.com
amazontrust.com
awstrust.com
amazonaws.com
7MittwaldLet’s Encrypt + Sectigoletsencrypt.org
sectigo.com
8WebgoLet’s Encrypt + Sectigoletsencrypt.org
sectigo.com
9raidboxes (Managed WordPress)Let’s Encryptletsencrypt.org
10Host Europe / DomainFactorySectigo + Let’s Encryptsectigo.com
letsencrypt.org
Name   Type   Flag   Tag      Value
@      CAA    0      issue    "digicert.com"
@      CAA    0      issue    "letsencrypt.org"
@      CAA    0      iodef    "mailto:security@your-domain.com"

The iodef line (last line) is optional but recommended: CAs report abuse attempts to that address. For subdomains (e.g. shop.your-domain.com) create separate records with the subdomain name instead of @ — modern CAs check parent CAA automatically though.

If your host is not on the list: open your current certificate in the browser (padlock → certificate → issuer). The CA name is shown there (e.g. "Sectigo RSA Domain Validation Secure Server CA" → value sectigo.com). Add that as a CAA record, done.

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

WordPress plugin: CAA records are NOT created in WordPress but in your domain registrar / DNS provider panel (e.g. Hetzner-Robot, IONOS Domains, Cloudflare Dashboard, INWX, etc.). Common label: "CAA record" or under "TXT records" with type selector "CAA". One separate record per CA.

✓ How to verify it works: On https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/analyze.html?d=your-domain.com → "DNS CAA" section → all your CAs should be listed. Or via dig: dig CAA your-domain.com.

No IPv6 support (no AAAA record).

☛ Action needed: Enable IPv6 support (AAAA records) for your domain. More and more users are using IPv6.
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

Your domain has no IPv6 address (AAAA record). Over 40% of users (especially mobile) reach the internet via IPv6 — they must take the slower IPv4 gateway detour.

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

WordPress plugin: Pure DNS + server matter. Step 1: check if your host has an IPv6 address for you (hosting panel or support ticket). Step 2: in the DNS panel create an AAAA record pointing to that IPv6. Step 3: test.

✓ How to verify it works: dig AAAA your-domain.com — or online https://ipv6-test.com/validate.php?url=your-domain.com.

No SPF record. Emails can be forged in the name of this domain.

☛ Action needed: Create an SPF DNS record (TXT) to specify which servers may send emails on behalf of your domain. Example: v=spf1 include:_spf.google.com ~all
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

SPF (Sender Policy Framework) defines in DNS which servers may send emails on behalf of your domain. Without SPF any phisher can spoof emails from you — and recipients are more likely to fall for them.

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

WordPress plugin: DNS matter, not WordPress. Create a TXT record in your DNS panel. Examples: If you send NO emails: v=spf1 -all (reject all senders). If only your host sends: v=spf1 a mx ~all. If Google Workspace: v=spf1 include:_spf.google.com ~all. If Microsoft 365: v=spf1 include:spf.protection.outlook.com -all.

✓ How to verify it works: dig TXT your-domain.com | grep spf — or online https://www.kitterman.com/spf/validate.html.

No DMARC record. The domain is vulnerable to email phishing.

☛ Action needed: Create a DMARC DNS record at _dmarc.yourdomain.com. DMARC protects against phishing and email spoofing. Example: v=DMARC1; p=quarantine; rua=mailto:dmarc@yourdomain.com
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

DMARC combines SPF and DKIM into an explicit instruction for receiving mail servers: "What to do if emails claim to come from us but SPF/DKIM fail?" Without DMARC each server decides — usually generously. With DMARC=reject you effectively prevent phishing in your name.

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

WordPress plugin: DNS matter. TXT record at subdomain _dmarc.your-domain.com. Recommended stages: Observe first: v=DMARC1; p=none; rua=mailto:dmarc-reports@your-domain.com — review reports for weeks. Then tighten: v=DMARC1; p=quarantine; rua=… — suspicious mails go to spam. Final: v=DMARC1; p=reject; rua=… — they’re refused outright.

✓ How to verify it works: dig TXT _dmarc.your-domain.com — or online https://dmarcian.com/dmarc-inspector/.

0 Security Contact (security.txt)

No security.txt file found (RFC 9116). Security researchers don't know how to report vulnerabilities.

☛ Action needed: Create a security.txt file at /.well-known/security.txt. This allows security researchers to responsibly report vulnerabilities. Required fields: Contact (email or URL) and Expires (expiration date).
▸ How to fix this — step-by-step guide

A security.txt (RFC 9116) tells security researchers how to responsibly report vulnerabilities to you. Without it, reports may go to spam or never be sent. A plain text file at the correct path is enough.

Apache server (classic hosting at most providers)

File: /.well-known/security.txt (create the folder if it doesn’t exist)

Contact: mailto:security@your-domain.com
Expires: 2027-12-31T23:59:59.000Z
Preferred-Languages: en, de
Canonical: https://your-domain.com/.well-known/security.txt

⚠ Replace "security@your-domain.com" with your actual security contact (or a generic info@). "Expires" must be a future date and should be renewed regularly. The file is plain .txt, not PHP.

WordPress Special for WordPress: where to add this

Option 1: via .htaccess (recommended — no theme editing)

File: security.txt file in /.well-known/ under your WordPress root

Contact: mailto:security@your-domain.com
Expires: 2027-12-31T23:59:59.000Z
Preferred-Languages: en, de
Canonical: https://your-domain.com/.well-known/security.txt

⚠ Via FTP/SFTP create a folder ".well-known" in the WordPress root (the leading dot matters — some FTP tools need "show hidden files" enabled), inside save the file security.txt with the content above. If WordPress redirects the URL: add to .htaccess: RewriteRule ^\.well-known/ - [L]

WordPress plugin: Plugin "security.txt" (search the plugin directory) lets you configure this in the WordPress backend without FTP.

✓ How to verify it works: Open https://your-domain.com/.well-known/security.txt in a browser — content must be visible (no 404).

100 External Reporting Endpoints

No external reporting endpoints detected.

80 Cookie Consent

No consent banner needed — no trackers or third-party cookies detected.

100 Privacy Policy & Legal Notice

Privacy policy linked: "Privacy Policy & Statement" (/us/privacy-policy-statement).

Legal notice linked: "Imprint" (/us/imprint).

Privacy policy page is accessible (HTTP 200).

⚙ Your ready-to-use security .htaccess

All missing security headers combined into one block. Append this block to the end of your .htaccess — done. 5 headers will be set.

⚠ Why this recommendation does NOT give a 100% score — and why that's how it is with WordPress

The Content-Security-Policy above deliberately includes 'unsafe-inline' for both style-src and script-src. This does NOT provide full XSS protection — it's a pragmatic trade-off, not a bug.

Why? A typical WordPress setup (theme + 5-15 plugins) emits 10-50 different inline <script> blocks into the HTML: jQuery init, slider init, cookie banner, tracking, GTM, web vitals, lazy-load, speculation rules and so on. A strict script-src 'self' blocks them all — the site becomes visually and functionally broken (blank slider, broken cookie banner, dead plugins).

Consequence for scoring: Sites running WordPress with plugins can score at most ~75-85 points in the CSP category in this app — the full 100% rating is only achievable when inline code is signed via nonce or hash (technically demanding, breaks on every theme/plugin update).

Paths to full XSS protection (in increasing complexity):

  • Plugin "WP Content Security Policy & Headers" — automatically adds nonces to inline scripts (medium effort, cleanest WP solution).
  • Hash-based CSP — whitelist every inline script via SHA-256 in the CSP (fragile, breaks on updates).
  • Externalize inline scripts — rebuild theme/plugins so no inline JS is emitted (huge effort, often impossible).

Anyone who doesn't take one of these paths lives with 'unsafe-inline' — like about 95% of all production WordPress sites on the web. The other CSP directives still protect: default-src 'self' blocks external resources, object-src 'none' bans Flash/Java, frame-ancestors 'self' prevents clickjacking, base-uri 'self' prevents base-tag hijacking. Not maximum protection, but realistic protection for WP reality.

⚠ Important on Hetzner-Konsoleh webhosting (managed / shared hosting)

On Hetzner-Konsoleh webhosting (and comparable shared hosts like All-Inkl, IONOS, Strato, 1blu, …), Apache throws a 500 Internal Server Error as soon as Header always edit Set-Cookie … expr=… appears in .htaccess. The Apache error log says:

Can't parse envclause/expression: syntax error, unexpected T_OP_STR_EQ, expecting $end

This is not a WebForensik bug and not a typo — the shared host has blocked the mod_headers expr= subset via AllowOverride limits (for security, because Header edit could also manipulate cookies of other tenants).

☛ For Hetzner-Konsoleh users: use the variant below marked with the red "Hetzner / Shared" badge. It consists of two files (.htaccess + wp-config.php) instead of one, but avoids the 500 error reliably. Cookie flags go into wp-config.php instead of .htaccess.

Apache Standard Apache (any host, without WordPress)

Append this block to the end of your .htaccess in the web root — done.

<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always set Content-Security-Policy "default-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' https: data:; object-src 'none'; frame-ancestors 'self'; base-uri 'self'; upgrade-insecure-requests"
    Header always set Permissions-Policy "camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), accelerometer=(), gyroscope=(), magnetometer=(), interest-cohort=(), browsing-topics=()"

    # Fehlende Cookie-Flags konditional ergänzen (nur wenn nicht schon gesetzt)
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; Secure" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*Secure*')"
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; HttpOnly" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*HttpOnly*')"
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; SameSite=Lax" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*SameSite*')"
</IfModule>

Hetzner / Shared Hetzner-Konsoleh / Managed Hosting (two files)

This variant avoids the 500 Internal Server Error on Hetzner-Konsoleh and similar shared hosts (All-Inkl, IONOS, Strato, 1blu …): the .htaccess only contains the header directives (no "Header edit"), cookie flags move into wp-config.php. Two files to edit instead of one, but guaranteed to run.

1. File: .htaccess in the WordPress root
# BEGIN WebForensik Security
<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always set Content-Security-Policy "default-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' https: data:; object-src 'none'; frame-ancestors 'self'; base-uri 'self'; upgrade-insecure-requests"
    Header always set Permissions-Policy "camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), accelerometer=(), gyroscope=(), magnetometer=(), interest-cohort=(), browsing-topics=()"
</IfModule>
# END WebForensik Security
2. File: wp-config.php in the WordPress root

Insert ABOVE the line "/* That's all, stop editing! */". Back up wp-config.php first!

// === WebForensik: Cookie-Hardening (Hetzner-Konsoleh-tauglich) ===
// Bitte OBERHALB der Zeile "/* That's all, stop editing! */" einfügen.
// Wirkt auf PHP-Session- und WordPress-Login-Cookies.
// Plugin-eigene Cookies (z.B. WooCommerce, Cookie-Banner) müssen in den
// Plugin-Einstellungen separat auf "Secure" gestellt werden.
@ini_set('session.cookie_secure',   '1');
@ini_set('session.cookie_httponly', '1');
@ini_set('session.cookie_samesite', 'Lax');
if (!defined('FORCE_SSL_ADMIN')) define('FORCE_SSL_ADMIN', true);

WordPress WordPress: .htaccess in WP root

Insert this block ABOVE the "# BEGIN WordPress" line, otherwise WP overwrites it on permalink changes.

# BEGIN WebForensik Security
<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    Header always set Content-Security-Policy "default-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' https: data:; object-src 'none'; frame-ancestors 'self'; base-uri 'self'; upgrade-insecure-requests"
    Header always set Permissions-Policy "camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), accelerometer=(), gyroscope=(), magnetometer=(), interest-cohort=(), browsing-topics=()"

    # Fehlende Cookie-Flags konditional ergänzen
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; Secure" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*Secure*')"
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; HttpOnly" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*HttpOnly*')"
    Header always edit Set-Cookie "^(.*)$" "$1; SameSite=Lax" "expr=!(resp('Set-Cookie') -strmatch '*SameSite*')"
</IfModule>
# END WebForensik Security

WordPress Alternative for WordPress: functions.php in child theme

If your host disallows .htaccess changes: append this PHP snippet to the end of your CHILD theme's functions.php. Back up first — NEVER edit the parent theme, it gets overwritten on updates.

add_action('send_headers', function () {
    header("Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' https: data:; object-src 'none'; frame-ancestors 'self'; base-uri 'self'; upgrade-insecure-requests");
    header("Permissions-Policy: camera=(), microphone=(), geolocation=(), payment=(), usb=(), accelerometer=(), gyroscope=(), magnetometer=(), interest-cohort=(), browsing-topics=()");
});

// Cookie-Flags für PHP-Session-Cookies — wirkt nur auf $_SESSION,
// NICHT auf von Plugins/Themes per setcookie() gesetzte Cookies.
// Für umfassende Cookie-Absicherung die .htaccess-Variante oben verwenden.
add_action('init', function () {
    if (headers_sent()) return;
    @ini_set('session.cookie_secure', '1');
    @ini_set('session.cookie_httponly', '1');
    @ini_set('session.cookie_samesite', 'Lax');
}, 1);
Dry-run — we re-load your site with the proposed headers and show which resources would be blocked. Takes about 30 seconds.
HTTP Response Headers
HeaderValue
cache-control max-age=0
content-encoding gzip
content-language en
content-length 20343
content-type text/html; charset=utf-8
date Sat, 30 May 2026 01:33:52 GMT
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New Scan · Compare

Embed your score on your website

Show your WebForensik score publicly. The badge is a lightweight SVG, loads fast, and respects your visitors' privacy (no tracking).

WebForensik Score Badge

HTML code to embed (this specific scan)

<a href="https://webforensik.de/results.php?id=123" target="_blank" rel="noopener">
  <img src="https://webforensik.de/badge.php?id=123" alt="WebForensik Score" width="174" height="28">
</a>

Or dynamically — always shows the latest scan of this domain

<a href="https://webforensik.de/?url=https://horsch.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener">
  <img src="https://webforensik.de/badge.php?domain=horsch.com" alt="WebForensik Score" width="174" height="28">
</a>