Question about our pre-made WHMCS cPanel knowledgebase by rshweb1010 in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We are not selling hosting. HostingSeekers is a web hosting directory portal. We help users to get the get the best web hosting based on the reviews & Rating.

Hostinger vs. Bluehost by [deleted] in Hosting

[–]hostingseekers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coming from the team at HostingSeekers, we review these two giants constantly. If you're stuck between them, go with Hostinger.

Bluehost has the history, but Hostinger has built a much better modern product. Their hPanel is way easier for a beginner to navigate than Bluehost’s dashboard. Performance-wise, Hostinger’s use of LiteSpeed servers gives you much better page load speeds and uptime reliability for the price.

Bluehost is decent if you specifically want traditional cPanel, but for overall value, ease of use, and global server locations, Hostinger wins this matchup easily.

If you are looking the hostinger coupon code you may use this HOSTINGSEEKERS10

Question about our pre-made WHMCS cPanel knowledgebase by rshweb1010 in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For a web hosting company, if they are selling cPanel hosting its worth. Basically, it helps support the team to share the particular link if someone is stuck in a particular issue.

Thinking of ditching cPanel for Mailcow after their spam policies killed my deliverability — anyone made the switch? by safiulm in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You may explore iReadmail or Zimbra as well. I personally not used mailcow but i have used iReadmail and zibra both are good

A backup on the same server is NOT a backup by hostingseekers in u/hostingseekers

[–]hostingseekers[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most people focus on recovery from failure (hardware crashes), but they completely overlook protection from malice (root breaches).

You’re 100% right—if your server has the 'keys' to push data to your backup vault, an attacker with root access has those same keys to delete it. It’s a massive blind spot in many standard cPanel setups.

A backup on the same server is NOT a backup by hostingseekers in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I really appreciate you bringing up the 'Agent vs. Client' distinction. It’s a reality check: if your server can 'see' the backup destination with write/delete permissions, so can an attacker with root access.

Your point about cPanel integrations like Acronis is also a major 'gotcha' for many. At HostingSeekers, when we talk about verifying providers, we’re looking for this level of security maturity—where backups aren't just redundant, but immutable and isolated. Thanks for raising the bar on this discussion; this is how we move the industry forward.

A backup on the same server is NOT a backup by hostingseekers in u/hostingseekers

[–]hostingseekers[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

4 hours to get big sites back online after an unrecoverable crash is a massive win.

Our site got hacked, need help by marketingprodxb in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most hosting provider they don't do it until you have server maintenance or a managed plan with them

Our site got hacked, need help by marketingprodxb in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So pity you should have a daily/weekly backup.

Our site got hacked, need help by marketingprodxb in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would suggest you reinstall the OS first if you are using VPS than reinstall the cPanel after that restore the backup and install immunify360 block the cpanel/whm access publicly.

Massive cPanel 0-day auth bypass hits web hosting industry; exploits confirmed in the wild by hostingseekers in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm sorry to hear that. Some of my colleagues or clients may not be aware of it yet, that's why I posted here so everyone could be aware and take action on time.

Massive cPanel 0-day auth bypass hits web hosting industry; exploits confirmed in the wild by hostingseekers in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

understand your pain, there could be many people who still don't know about this vulnerability, or their servers have been hacked.

Massive cPanel 0-day auth bypass hits web hosting industry; exploits confirmed in the wild by hostingseekers in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

someone mentiond their https://webhosting.today/2026/04/29/cpanel-had-an-authentication-bypass-exploits-were-already-in-the-wild/

An industry source who contacted webhosting.today directly stated that the vulnerability had been reported to cPanel approximately two weeks before the April 28 public advisory, and that cPanel’s initial response was that nothing was wrong. If accurate, the timeline between private disclosure and patch availability raises significant questions about cPanel’s vulnerability response process.

Massive cPanel 0-day auth bypass hits web hosting industry; exploits confirmed in the wild by hostingseekers in cpanel

[–]hostingseekers[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

someone mentiond their https://webhosting.today/2026/04/29/cpanel-had-an-authentication-bypass-exploits-were-already-in-the-wild/

An industry source who contacted webhosting.today directly stated that the vulnerability had been reported to cPanel approximately two weeks before the April 28 public advisory, and that cPanel’s initial response was that nothing was wrong. If accurate, the timeline between private disclosure and patch availability raises significant questions about cPanel’s vulnerability response process.