iMeddles

joined 2 years ago
[–] iMeddles@infosec.pub 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

The ultimate bad bot blocker (https://github.com/mitchellkrogza/nginx-ultimate-bad-bot-blocker) does the heavy lifting for me, it updates multiple times per day to add and remove IP addreses and bot referers. It does need some monitoring though, some of the rules wildcard a bit hard and will catch mastadon servers with unusual names for example.

[–] iMeddles@infosec.pub 10 points 6 months ago

I worte a guide last year on how I do network bound encryption - that is the disk will automatically decrypt at boot if it's connected to my home network, but not if the disk or machine is removed from my house. The advantage over the dropbear method is that you can set unattended upgrades to auto reboot your server whenever it installs security updates, and it'll come back up with no manual intervention from you.

[–] iMeddles@infosec.pub 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Every machine is named after what it does (although I do 1337-ify the names, because I'm still a late 90s IRC teen at heart). If you've ever been onboarded into a sysadmin role where all the machines are named with whatever whimsical naming scheme each department chose, you'll fast develop a visceral hatred for non-descriptive naming schemes. The fifth time you get a ticket saying something like 'Hedwig is down' and you have to go crawling through three layers of linked files on SharePoint to find what and where 'Hedwig' is, you'll be ready to beat the person who named it to death, and that attitude tends to persist to your home naming scheme :p