|
You are here |
www.tubsta.com | ||
| | | | |
blog.tho.ms
|
|
| | | | | The current generation Internet protocol IPv4 is nearing address exhaustion, and wide deployment of its successor IPv6 is just around the corner. Some ISPs h... | |
| | | | |
h3artbl33d.nl
|
|
| | | | | Security and privacy activist | |
| | | | |
devnonsense.com
|
|
| | | | | KubeCon this year featured a panel discussion of IPv6 adoption. One of the panelists mentioned in passing that many organizations are unprepared for the security implications IPv6. With IPv4, most addresses were hidden by NAT; with IPv6, addresses are publicly routable. Firewalls can block external traffic, but might not be configured correctly. So I did an experiment on my home network. Would enabling IPv6 expose my devices on the public internet? | |
| | | | |
duerrenberger.dev
|
|
| | | Learn the basic Nginx location configuration options and how to prevent public access to certain directories, which is for example recommended for Kirby CMS | ||