Re: Security for Traveling?
We changed ISPs some time back and the results were interesting.
When on my original adsl connection, I did a check at Gibson and got all green boxes (full stealth). It showed my personal .co.uk domain. Then I enabled a firewall from within my account at the ISP. Gibson again correctly recorded my domain but now showed SSH (IIRC port 22) as blocked.
I then changed ISPs . Gibson now reports the IP address as <several numbers and letters> @ <ISP Name> and shows all green boxes but the stealth test fails because there was a response to a ping!
So it seems the test can be undermined by the settings that the ISP adopts. That suggests to me that the only way to properly test the actual computer would to be to do the test from a connection that you know to be totally insecure. Alternatively, it will be good practice to at least do the common ports test from each new location before actually using it
We changed ISPs some time back and the results were interesting.
When on my original adsl connection, I did a check at Gibson and got all green boxes (full stealth). It showed my personal .co.uk domain. Then I enabled a firewall from within my account at the ISP. Gibson again correctly recorded my domain but now showed SSH (IIRC port 22) as blocked.
I then changed ISPs . Gibson now reports the IP address as <several numbers and letters> @ <ISP Name> and shows all green boxes but the stealth test fails because there was a response to a ping!
So it seems the test can be undermined by the settings that the ISP adopts. That suggests to me that the only way to properly test the actual computer would to be to do the test from a connection that you know to be totally insecure. Alternatively, it will be good practice to at least do the common ports test from each new location before actually using it
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