WEB Firewall

Protects web applications from common network threats by monitoring, filtering, and blocking packets.

Choose The Best Plan

Pick your plan. Change whenever you want. Upgrade requires payment of price difference

Bronze version

Protect for testing

499-Monthly
5800-Yearly
  • Protected Domain:1 first-level domain name, 9 subdomain names
  • Protected Port: Standard & Non-Standard
  • Business Bandwidth:50Mbps
  • Requests:2,000QPS
  • CC peak:100,000QPs

Silver version

Advanced project

999-Monthly
11000-Yearly
  • Protected Domain:3 first-level domain name, 27 subdomain names
  • Protected Port: Standard & Non-Standard
  • Business Bandwidth:100Mbps
  • Requests:5,000QPS
  • CC peak:300,000QPs

Gold version

Business Project

2999-Monthly
35000-Yearly
  • Protected Domain:5 first-level domain name, 45 subdomain names
  • Protected Port: Standard & Non-Standard
  • Business Bandwidth:200Mbps
  • Requests:10,000QPS
  • CC peak:1,000,000QPS

Platinum version

Unlimited defense

5999-Monthly
71000-Yearly
  • Protected Domain:10 first-level domain names, 90 subdomain names
  • Protected Port: Standard & Non-Standard
  • Business Bandwidth:300Mbps
  • Requests:2,0000QPS
  • CC peak:800,000QPs
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Knowledge

What is a web firewall?

Web Application Firewall (WAF) automatically protects against web vulnerabilities, conducts multi-dimensional detection and security protection on website traffic, and prevents hacker viruses from invading.

  • Zero False Positives
  • Core Algorithm
  • Access Control
  • CC Attack Protection
  • DNS Intelligent Scheduling
  • Full Log Support

From our blog

We provide industry news, not limited to security technology and network protection

DNS Attack Types Explained

DNS Attack Types Explained

19 Nov 24 15 mins read

Discover the various types of DNS attacks that threaten network security. From DNS spoofing and DDoS attacks to cache po...

What problems have HTTP/1, HTTP/2, and HTTP/3 solved?

What problems have HTTP/1, HTTP/2, and HTTP/3 solved?

18 Nov 24 10 mins read

HTTP/1, HTTP/2, and HTTP/3 have been crucial in enhancing web performance. HTTP/1 suffered from head - of - line blockin...

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