Stop exposing these 6 services to the internet, even with strong passwords
There is a distinct thrill in setting up your first home server or NAS. Unless you're treating it like a backup server, this becomes your haven for storing photos, running a media server like Plex, or hosting a personal website. The logical next step thereafter is to enable remote access to all these services even when you're disconnected from the home network, but therein lies a huge, unopened can of worms. You could forward a few ports on your router, maybe set up a dynamic DNS, and you're live. However, the internet is teeming with bots, scripts, and scanners like Shodan that are constantly rattling doorknobs. The moment you open a port, you are painting a target on your digital back.
There is a distinct thrill in setting up your first home server or NAS. Unless you’re treating it like a backup server, this becomes your haven for storing photos, running a media server like Plex, or hosting a personal website. The logical next step thereafter is to enable remote access to all these services even when you’re disconnected from the home network, but therein lies a huge, unopened can of worms. You could forward a few ports on your router, maybe set up a dynamic DNS, and you’re live. However, the internet is teeming with bots, scripts, and scanners like Shodan that are constantly rattling doorknobs. The moment you open a port, you are painting a target on your digital back.
Nathan Ennis
Canada
Canada
Published by: aplhsindia.in
