About Us

Our mission is to ensure the swift and secure exchange of property related data and provide essential support services to our clients, including billing and ongoing IT development support, with first class service and relationship back up.

Xit2 is a part of Macdonald Dettwiler and Associates (MDA). MDA employs over 3,000 people through offices in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada.

MDA provides professionals such as lawyers, lenders and valuers in the UK and Ireland with essential information on millions of properties for the conveyancing, mortgage financing and insurance of properties.

Security

Security is extremely important to us here at Xit2 and we have numerous security measures in place to protect against the loss, misuse or alteration of information that we have collected from you.

When you access our site using Microsoft Internet Explorer versions 5.5 or higher, Secure Socket Layer (SSL) technology protects your information using both server authentication and data encryption, ensuring that your data is safe, secure, and available only to registered Users in your organization. Your data will be completely inaccessible by anyone else.

Our systems do not use "cookies" to store other confidential user and session information, but instead implements more advanced security methods based on dynamic data and encoded session IDs.

Our systems require users to be logged on by entering a username, password and pin number for added security. The password automatically expires and has to be changed periodically.

In addition, our systems are hosted in a secure server environment that uses a firewall and other advanced technology to prevent interference or access from outside intruders.

Our servers use RAID technology to minimise the risk of data loss. In addition, all data is backed up on a daily rotation to our off-site backup servers.

To check the security of your connection, look at the lower left-hand corner of your browser window after accessing the server. If you see an unbroken key or a closed lock (depending on your browser), then SSL is active. You can also double check by looking at the URL line of your browser. When accessing a secure server, the first characters of the site address will change from "http" to "https".