diff --git a/public/blog/feed.xml b/public/blog/feed.xml index 7ab74c2..4c562af 100644 --- a/public/blog/feed.xml +++ b/public/blog/feed.xml @@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ challenges faced by most homelabbers.</p> measures put in place aren't baseless. My own experience, as well as that of a sizable number of people on the wonderful <a rel="nofollow noreferrer" href="https://join-lemmy.org">lemmy</a> community at -<code>selfhosted@lemmy.world</code> shows that home servers are endlessly 'knocked&quot; +<code>selfhosted@lemmy.world</code> shows that home servers are endlessly 'knocked' on, and that login attempts to services like SSH <em>are</em> made. Here's a snippet from my <a rel="nofollow noreferrer" href="https://fail2ban.org">fail2ban</a> filter to verify this point:</p> diff --git a/public/blog/home-server-security/index.html b/public/blog/home-server-security/index.html index 5a93d76..976231a 100644 --- a/public/blog/home-server-security/index.html +++ b/public/blog/home-server-security/index.html @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -Home server security

Home server security

2024-03-28

Introduction#

Home server security is pretty often overlooked from what I can tell. Any device accessible from the internet has some degree of vulnerability in the current era of the internet. I aim for this document to detail methods to amend the contemporary cybersecurity challenges faced by most homelabbers.

Justification in Depth#

Of course, my statements about home servers needing some security measures put in place aren't baseless. My own experience, as well as that of a sizable number of people on the wonderful lemmy community at selfhosted@lemmy.world shows that home servers are endlessly 'knocked" on, and that login attempts to services like SSH are made. Here's a snippet from my fail2ban filter to verify this point:

Mar 29 14:38:13 icefall fail2ban.filter[1097]: INFO [...] Found 176.126.240.158 - 2024-03-29 14:38:13
+Home server security

Home server security

2024-03-28

Introduction#

Home server security is pretty often overlooked from what I can tell. Any device accessible from the internet has some degree of vulnerability in the current era of the internet. I aim for this document to detail methods to amend the contemporary cybersecurity challenges faced by most homelabbers.

Justification in Depth#

Of course, my statements about home servers needing some security measures put in place aren't baseless. My own experience, as well as that of a sizable number of people on the wonderful lemmy community at selfhosted@lemmy.world shows that home servers are endlessly 'knocked' on, and that login attempts to services like SSH are made. Here's a snippet from my fail2ban filter to verify this point:

Mar 29 14:38:13 icefall fail2ban.filter[1097]: INFO [...] Found 176.126.240.158 - 2024-03-29 14:38:13
 Mar 29 14:40:11 icefall fail2ban.filter[1097]: INFO [...] Found 176.126.240.158 - 2024-03-29 14:40:11
 Mar 29 14:40:29 icefall fail2ban.filter[1097]: INFO [...] Found 185.8.165.204 - 2024-03-29 14:40:29
 Mar 29 14:40:40 icefall fail2ban.filter[1097]: INFO [...] Found 162.212.154.58 - 2024-03-29 14:40:40