Privacy & Security
Your transactions through our family of web sites are extremely secure. We use Paypal and Verisign Secure Gateway with GoDaddy 256 bit SSL Certificates! The level of security provided by these three industry leaders is unsurpassed.
At Veilso we take your Privacy and Security a step further. We do not contact you after the sale for reasons other than correspondence with you regarding your purchase. Periodically as a way to say thank you for your business we may send a valuable coupon to you. We value your time and privacy. Without question your transactions with our company are very secure. To verify this look for the https in the address bar as you are completing your credit card transactions. The (s) is a sign to you that the transaction is secure.
Customers who feel more comfortable placing their order over the phone may call toll free 877.248.9191
FYI:
The actual encryption strength on a secure Web site connection enabled by a digital SSL certificate is determined by the level of encryption supported by the site visitor's browser and the server that the Web site resides on. For example, the combination of a Firefox browser and our Apache Web server enables 256-bit AES encryption with our SSL certificates. That means that since our Web site is hosted on a server whose software supports 256-bit encryption — Apache —, then site visitors that use a Firefox browser will have their transactions with our site protected by 256-encryption. Thus with the right combination of Web browser and Web server, you can establish a 256-bit encrypted secure connection via an SSL certificate.
Encryption strength is measured in key length — number of bits in the key. To decipher an SSL communication, one needs to generate the correct decoding key. Mathematically speaking, 2n possible values exist for an n-bit key. Thus, 40-bit encryption involves 240 possible values, 128-bit encryption 2128 combinations, and 256-bit keys involves a staggering 2256 possible combinations, rendering the encrypted data de facto impervious to intrusion. Even with a brute-force attack (the process of systematically trying all possible combinations until the right one is found) cracking a 256-bit encryption is computationally unfeasible.

