I hope you have disabled ALG in your router
We did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in yourfirewall for miscreants to slip through
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
I hope you have disabled ALG in your routerfirewall for miscreants to slip through
We did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
On Tue, 03 Nov 2020 07:54:15 -0500, Bit Twister<BitTwister@mouse-potato.com> wrote:
block.I hope you have disabled ALG in your router
Care to give an example of how to do so? It isn't some protocol or port to
the partWe did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your firewall for miscreants to slip through
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
From what I'm reading at https://github.com/samyk/slipstream, the ALG is
of Network Address Translation that allows multiple computers within the lanto
access the same external ip address and port.applies.
The hack is just another method of hacking routers, so the same advice
In the router - Turn off UPNP. Change it's password so it isn't the default.Change
the local address of the router, so that if the router does get hacked andreset to
it's defaults, it stops working until you figure out what happened and fixit.
In all computers connected to the router - Use a firewall on every computer.Do not
rely on the firewall features in the router to protect your systems. WithMageia,
it defaults to using shorewall. Do not set it to allow all traffic fromanywhere.
I don't use any internet of things devices, so can't give any advice onthose.
This is not as bad as the soap attacks on upnp or a reason to panic. Asusual the
press is clearly looking to grab as much attention as possible.
Regards, Dave Hodgins
On Tue, 03 Nov 2020 07:54:15 -0500, Bit Twister<BitTwister@mouse-potato.com> wrote:
block.I hope you have disabled ALG in your router
Care to give an example of how to do so? It isn't some protocol or port to
the partWe did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your firewall for miscreants to slip through
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
From what I'm reading at https://github.com/samyk/slipstream, the ALG is
of Network Address Translation that allows multiple computers within the lanto
access the same external ip address and port.applies.
The hack is just another method of hacking routers, so the same advice
In the router - Turn off UPNP. Change it's password so it isn't the default.Change
the local address of the router, so that if the router does get hacked andreset to
it's defaults, it stops working until you figure out what happened and fixit.
In all computers connected to the router - Use a firewall on every computer.Do not
rely on the firewall features in the router to protect your systems. WithMageia,
it defaults to using shorewall. Do not set it to allow all traffic fromanywhere.
I don't use any internet of things devices, so can't give any advice onthose.
This is not as bad as the soap attacks on upnp or a reason to panic. Asusual the
press is clearly looking to grab as much attention as possible.
What are the consequences if one does disable? My system has four ALG configurations PPTP, IPSec(VPN), RTSP,SIP. Do all four need to be
terminated?
On 2020-11-03, Bit Twister <BitTwister@mouse-potato.com> wrote:
I hope you have disabled ALG in your router
We did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your firewall for miscreants to slip through
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
What are the consequences if one does disable?
My system has four ALG
configurations PPTP, IPSec(VPN), RTSP,SIP. Do all four need to be
terminated?
I hope you have disabled ALG in your routerfirewall for miscreants to slip through
We did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 17:39:36 -0000 (UTC), William Unruh wrote:
On 2020-11-03, Bit Twister <BitTwister@mouse-potato.com> wrote:
I hope you have disabled ALG in your router
We did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your firewall for miscreants to slip through
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
What are the consequences if one does disable?
Depends if you have to have it or not.
My system has four ALG
configurations PPTP, IPSec(VPN), RTSP,SIP. Do all four need to be
terminated?
That is your decision. You are responsible for any damages from your device(s)/system(s).
Personally, I have no desire for people, in black glasses and black
jackets with big 3 letters on them, showing up at my house hauling
me and my hardware off to who knows where.
I can only guess I would not be getting the hardware back anytime soon.
On 3/11/20 11:54 pm, Bit Twister wrote:
I hope you have disabled ALG in your router
We did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your firewall for miscreants to slip through
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
My router has two entries for ALG
one for SIP --disabled
one for H.323 --enabled..
H.323 is for packet based multimedia
SIP Session Initiation Protocol), a protocol designed for the setup, management, and termination of a media session.
they could both be disabled. I don't run webcam or zoom/skype
On 2020-11-03, Bit Twister <BitTwister@mouse-potato.com> wrote:
On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 17:39:36 -0000 (UTC), William Unruh wrote:
On 2020-11-03, Bit Twister <BitTwister@mouse-potato.com> wrote:
I hope you have disabled ALG in your router
We did NAT see that coming: How malicious JavaScript can open holes in your firewall for miscreants to slip through
https://www.theregister.com/2020/11/02/application_level_gateway_flaw/
What are the consequences if one does disable?
Depends if you have to have it or not.
My system has four ALG
configurations PPTP, IPSec(VPN), RTSP,SIP. Do all four need to be
terminated?
That is your decision. You are responsible for any damages from your
device(s)/system(s).
I am asking a technical question: Does leaving some of them running also
run the risk of my router opening a hole to my machines? If not which
are the crucial ones. The web pages talks about SIP. Do the others
present equal problems.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 482 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 55:15:28 |
Calls: | 9,566 |
Files: | 13,661 |
Messages: | 6,142,848 |