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Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: May 30th, 2021

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  • krash@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlThe power of Linux
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    12 days ago

    This is true - it is enabled by default in win11. I disagree with you it being a terrible idea - imagine all the sentistive data people put on their hard drives - would they want to to fall in the wrong hands if they lose their computer? Or if their hard drives fails so they can do a secure wipe?

    I’m not a fan of Microsoft, but they did solve the key issue in the enterprise setting by storing the key in they entrance identity. Same should be done for home consumers, since having a Microsoft account is being shoved in everyone’s throat anyway…






  • Thank you for taking the time to answer throughly! I noted your advice and chunked up my goals into “mini-projects”, once I have all the configurations set and all devices connected to the new router. I did check what I bought is a router, not a switch (I find the naming of the device acting as the gateway between the LAN and WAN to be a bit ambigous: switch, router, gateway…).

    As for the IDS capability, this is something that would be done by a raspberry pi being fed packets from the router. I don’t know if I will ever undertake that task, but I keep it in mind if I’ll feel adventorous 🙃

    (for those wondering: Linux Magazine #279 has a guide on how to accomplish this with a Fritz!Box 7583).


  • Thank you for all the questions to help me clarify my use case 🙂

    At the very basic, I’d like to:

    1. achieve better security through segmentation by isolating cloud-connected devices, guest devices from trusted devices.
    2. Being able to “pin” a Mac address to an IP, and being able to use internal network name resolution to reach those devices.
    3. a blocklist for known ad-domains / malicious domains.

    Once the basics are in place, I’d like to elevate my netsec game and implement:

    • a high level monitoring capability to seen what devices are communicating with what domains / IPs
    • An IDS capability of some sort to be able to detect anomalies in my LAN.

    The NAS part is just for convince, it would be nice to have a samba / NFS with my files available when I need them.



  • Welcome to the deep rabbit hole :-) how much do you know about how computers work? In general, you’re going to need to understand some basic networking and general Linux administration, but if you already have a grasp on that then I’d say you just need to start small (simple service, aim to have a resilience goal with backups and restoration) and other metrics that motivates you. Perhaps you want to learn something new with every service you host? You decide, this is your hobby :-)









  • There are various obstacles to “just forking” a project; it requires times to understand the frameworks / libraries used in the project, understand the code and its different parts and last but not least, have a interest to invest that time and energy (most often, that time could be spent developing your own solution that would fit your usecase better).

    As for the stage I was referring to, both the theories of enshittification and rot-economy see software and services going through stages to attract new users, before going in for the profit maximizing.