← All services

Managed Edge Firewall

WordPress-focused WAF protection without the usual security noise.

FirePhage stops hostile traffic at the edge before it reaches your origin. Teams see clear attack summaries, practical recommendations, and a dashboard built for humans instead of firewall specialists.

Attack filtering

99.9%

Daily visibility

24/7

Human-readable alerts

Built in

FirePhage dashboard preview

Blocked requests trend

Stop noisy attack traffic early

Malicious requests are handled at the edge so your origin does less defensive work under pressure.

Understand what was blocked

See readable attack summaries, action types, countries, and hot paths without digging through raw logs.

Move faster during incidents

When a site comes under pressure, your team gets a calm operational picture instead of fragmented security noise.

Problem this solves

Why teams end up needing WAF

A typical website owner does not need a giant firewall rule maze. They need clear protection, readable alerts, and help when traffic turns hostile.

Example: login attack spike

A WordPress login endpoint starts receiving a burst of hostile POST requests from multiple countries. FirePhage blocks or challenges that traffic at the edge, shows the affected paths, and helps the team see whether the attack is widening or calming down.

Managed rule posture

Protection modes are tuned for real websites, not left as a blank firewall project for your team to solve.

Origin shielding

Requests are evaluated before they touch your infrastructure, helping reduce direct exposure to the origin.

Readable threat telemetry

Blocked attack counts, recent events, and protection state are visible in one place.

Agency-ready oversight

Teams managing multiple domains get one dashboard instead of disconnected edge tools.

How it fits FirePhage

A service page that connects back to the real product, not a thin SEO shell.

Every FirePhage service page is meant to explain one capability clearly, then connect that capability back to pricing, onboarding, the dashboard, and the real website problems teams are trying to solve.