• maccentric@sh.itjust.works
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        13 days ago

        What would you recommend? I have a client with some pretty old hardware (FVS 318) installed that I suspect is causing some issues on their network.

        • eclipse@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Honestly, these days I have no idea. When I said “wouldn’t recommend” that wasn’t an assertion to avoid; just a lack of opinion. Most of my recent experience is with Cloud vendors wherein the problem domain is quite different.

          I’ve had experience with most of the big vendors and they’ve all had quirks etc. that you just have to deal with. Fundamentally it’ll come down to a combination of price, support requirements, and internal competence with the kit. (Don’t undermine the last item; it’s far better if you can fix problems yourself.)

          Personally I’d actually argue that most corporates could get by with a GNU/Linux VM (or two) for most of their routing and firewalling and it would absolutely be good enough; functionally you can do the same and more. That’s not to say dedicated machines for the task aren’t valuable but I’d say it’s the exception rather than rule that you need ASICs and the like.

    • frezik@midwest.social
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      13 days ago

      It wasn’t designed for a security purpose in the first place. So turn the question around: why does NAT make a network more secure at all?

      The answer is that it doesn’t. Firewalls work fine without NAT. Better, in fact, because NAT itself is a complication firewalls have to deal with, and complications are the enemy of security. The benefits of obfuscating hosts behind the firewall is speculative and doesn’t outweigh other benefits of end to end addressing.

      • AceBonobo@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        The main benefit of a NAT is that by default it prevents all external access to the hosts inside the network. Any port you have open is not accessible unless explicitly forwarded.

        This has a lot of security benefits. Regardless, everything you said is sounds true to me.

        • frezik@midwest.social
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          13 days ago

          You can get exactly the same benefit by blocking non-established/non-related connections on your firewall. NAT does nothing to help security.

          Edit: BTW–every time I see this response of “NAT can prevent external access”, I severely question the poster’s networking knowledge. Like to the level where I wonder how you manage to config a home router correctly. Or maybe it’s the way home routers present the interface that leads people to believe the two functions are intertwined when they aren’t.

          • AceBonobo@lemmy.world
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            13 days ago

            I didn’t mean prevent, just makes it harder by default. You can still open connections from within the NAT

            Edit: I do admit to failing at accessing my IPv6 PC from my IPv6 phone

            Edit2: apparently NAT is full of security bugs

            • frezik@midwest.social
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              13 days ago

              If your home router blocked incoming connections on IPv4 by default now, then it’s likely to continue doing so for IPv6. At least, I would hope so. The manufacturer did a bad job if otherwise.

              • AceBonobo@lemmy.world
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                13 days ago

                I figure the mobile carrier was blocking incoming connections to my phone. This was a couple of years ago, things might have changed since then.

        • hank_and_deans@lemmy.ca
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          13 days ago

          Yeah, no. If remote hosts could not send traffic to hosts behind NAT almost nothing would work.

          The hacks employed to make NAT work make security worse, not better.

          • AceBonobo@lemmy.world
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            13 days ago

            You’re talking about NAT traversal? We do have control over which we apps we run though?

            Edit: apparently NAT is full of bugs