@MSgtRedFox@infosec.pub
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MSgtRedFox

@MSgtRedFox@infosec.pub

Husband, Father, IT Pro, service.

If I ask a lot of questions, I might understand why.

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MSgtRedFox,
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I find this super interesting.

Firstly, I don’t support their views in your example.

I don’t like that they get to spread them. The same thing could be said about people who are anti religion against people talking about their religion. Both parties might say they don’t like the other spreading their views.

  • If someone moched a cancer patient, we’d loose our minds.
  • When someone mocks supremacists, we enjoy it. They don’t. The difference is our perspective.
  • If the mocked or bullied cancer patient contacted mods, the offending account would get banned.
  • If we mock one group and get banned and other mock another group and don’t, isn’t that being hypocritical?

Again, I have no sympathy for some hater crying about their feeling getting hurt when they post garbage, more pathetic than anything.

MSgtRedFox,
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People love echo chambers and affirmations don’t they…

MSgtRedFox,
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The not saying why they were banned is what inspired my question.

I was afraid those people would just come here, but the moderation based on instance and community seems to be working so far. I’m curious how’s that’s going to scale.

MSgtRedFox,
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Ah. Understood.

MSgtRedFox,
@MSgtRedFox@infosec.pub avatar

The profile Blocklists could start growing, that’s for sure 😀

MSgtRedFox,
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Yeah, no doubt. I’m picturing the same person saying hateful stuff turning around saying how unfair it is to get called out, using a super whiny voice. Irony.

MSgtRedFox,
@MSgtRedFox@infosec.pub avatar

I’m curious about the down votes for the post.

They want less discussion about the topic?

Or they don’t like the idea not having anonymity?

MSgtRedFox,
@MSgtRedFox@infosec.pub avatar

Yeah, it’s a lot. It’s a very large field, and you’re playing in two or three areas here.

Look at a couple of overlay options. ZeroTier is the one I remember off top of my head. There are others, Google alternatives. These use a coordination server. Some are a hosted service, but there’s some that you host yourself. These are supposed to be pretty easy. You watch a couple of videos on these, I bet you’re be fine.

Wire guard offers more traditional VPN. You can tunnel your device back to your network. Some routers offer a VPN option. There’s open sense, ddwrt, etc. Again, lots of videos.

Since you said you mostly wanted remote access, I strongly suggest not opening services to public and use VPN.

You can still learn reverse proxy too, but just do it internally, even though it wouldn’t technically be needed. This will be much safer and learner friendly.

I have ridiculous amounts of services running, but I use gateway router VPN to access most of them.

MSgtRedFox,
@MSgtRedFox@infosec.pub avatar

What cert did you put on the proxy answering the inbound? Usually that error means either the browser doesn’t like the cert, or it’s connecting to 80, and modern browsers really fight you on that sometimes. Also, cache. Clear your cache if you’re bouncing between internal URL/IP and the public.

I assume you just want to expose to internet to learn art of reverse. Otherwise there’s better ways.

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