Hi. I wanted to know if it’s needed to install a firewall on a linux desktop/laptop. Why yes or why no?

  • @[email protected]
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    659 months ago

    If your computer is connected to a network, I don’t see any downside of enabling a firewall. It’s a good security layer to have and costs basically no resources to keep running.

    • RaivoKulli
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      79 months ago

      I guess a downside is having to fiddle with it, allowing stuff you want to get through. Sometimes it blocks stuff you don’t want blocked

      • Mindlight
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        49 months ago

        I’d rather have to open up stuff my self then have an uninvited visitor doing it without me knowing about it.

  • @[email protected]
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    219 months ago

    Yes, and hopefully you will have one preinstalled, blocking all incoming connections.

    An outbound firewall like Opensnitch or Portmaster is also nice. But here I would say often you dont need one. Balena Etcher was the only App loading Ads, at all. Firefox and Thunderbird can be hardened. The rest is okay and doesnt phone home, Flatpak permissions ard also great.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Linux comes with a default firewall it’s called IPtables/NFtables, Just make sure that it’s on. Example I Ubuntu Sudo ufw enable.

      • Turun
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        189 months ago

        If you allow the whole subnet you might as well not use a firewall. Your router has one and port forwarding is disabled by default.

          • NaN
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            59 months ago

            Your isp firewall uses nat, and a hacked isp gateway or some other device that had ports forwarded to it are the most likely things to be reaching into your network. They’ll be on that subnet.

              • NaN
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                9 months ago

                Yes, they’re giving “very simplistic” and also demonstrating how to deny and add access in multiple ways.

                It’s also not uncommon to do things like that. The default firewall config in Fedora is wide open for every port above 1024.

                • @[email protected]
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                  19 months ago

                  I set up a rule last night to allow SSH access from any device on my subnet, is it a good idea to add a separate rule blocking SSH from my router? I’ve already set up SSH with public key authentication so in theory there aren’t many devices that can access it but the firewall restriction seemed like a good idea

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          Yeah, I kind of agree. Unless this is a mobile device pretty much all traffic will come from within your subnet. I often deny incoming from my gateway (i.e. router) and poke holes as necessary.

        • Turun
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          19 months ago

          Can you elaborate on that? I’m curious what you mean.

            • Turun
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              29 months ago

              Thanks. So docker manipulates iptabels directly, thereby bypassing ufw rules. (Your previous comment was just really vague)

    • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬
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      -29 months ago

      It’s also comically useless to have a desktop firewall application installed when you’re already behind some sort of firewall solution like a router not forwarding most incoming traffic.

      • @[email protected]
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        119 months ago

        It depends. Sure, maybe somewhat redundant for a home desktop that just stays at home on a network you control, but for a laptop it is absolutely essential.

        You may also want a firewall to defend against other devices within your local network. Let’s say you have IoT devices, many of which are poorly secured and maintained by their manufacturers, or you live with family members or guests who don’t practice or even know about proper computing hygiene and are bringing in devices onto your local WiFi.

        • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬
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          39 months ago

          My IoT devices already have a dedicated network and guest can use my guest WiFi. But yes, you’re right. It depends. And especially for mobile devices some sort of local firewall solution could be relevant. If there are no ports exposed to the LAN you’re pretty save, though.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            No you aren’t, browser based malware puts the attacker inside your fancy network. A basic firewall will greatly hinder any attack at basically no cost to you.

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        There’s incoming and then there’s outgoing traffic. Software firewalls can forbid processes that may be advertised as “offline only” from reaching out; typically a hardware firewall doesn’t care about this kind of thing.

      • @Salix
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        9 months ago

        Some people like hosting some servers on their desktop as well, and doesn’t want others on their local network to access them. With firewalls, you can allow specific IP address to reach those servers.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        That’s fine right up until something on your network, even the ISP modem-firewall-router-switch itself, gets compromised.

  • @[email protected]
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    149 months ago

    Ironically enough if you do not know what a firewall actually does (and saying it “protects” against "stuff is NOT enough) IMHO you do need one. That being said unless you know what you are doing, better leave it to the default one with default settings.

  • @[email protected]
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    149 months ago

    Do you need a lock on the door of your place?

    No, but it’s a damn good idea to protect whatever is in it.

        • @[email protected]
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          69 months ago

          It’s not.

          If you have a house, it has a door which you can use to access everything inside.

          If you have a linux install with no services running on it, it has no doors, and thus doesn’t need any door locks. And if it does have services running on there (which run publicly), it now has doors, sure, but getting one of those doors open doesn’t guarantee access to the whole house - usually it’s gonna be an empty room

          • @[email protected]
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            -39 months ago

            Linux with no services? That’s not a usable system for anyone who would ask “do I need a firewall”

            Systemd is a service that runs logind. What are you doing without them?

            • @[email protected]
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              69 months ago

              I think by services they mean self-hosted, web-based services, or things like sshd - services which work by actively serving connections on a particular port or ports.

              • @[email protected]
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                39 months ago

                And even then, a properly configured SSHD instance wouldn’t really benefit from a firewall, unless you wanted to block all countries besides your own or something.

  • @[email protected]
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    139 months ago

    On a laptop absolutely. My firewall on my laptop doesn’t let me discriminate between networks so I’m always worried someone will try to attack me on public WiFi for the few ports I want open

    On a desktop on a network you trust less important but still no firewall means if another device on your network gets compromised you’re screwed

    • Possibly linux
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      29 months ago

      Keep in mind that a firewall may not be nessasary if you don’t have any network services running.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      For laptop, what kind of attack would we be protecting ourselves from? I get the relevance of antivirus, VPN, and device encryption, but what about firewall?

      • @[email protected]
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        59 months ago

        Any vulnerabilities in any of your software that can talk to a network, ssh, browser, the operating system itsself could be exploited if your firewall is down

        If you’re using username and password and have ssh enabled, for example anyone on your network could attempt to log in to your machine

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            At that point why not just have the firewall set to deny everything just to be safe though? There’s always the chance you missed something that’s decided to listen on some random port and if you aren’t using anything that listens on a network why have the firewall open anyway

          • @[email protected]
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            9 months ago

            My understanding is there can be a vulnerability in absolutely anything

            Browsers are unlikely to but don’t think it’s impossible

            • @[email protected]
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              19 months ago

              A firewall protects open ports on your machine. A browser does not have any open ports.

              Of course they have vulnerabilities, but a firewall won’t protect you from them.

      • @Paragone
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        -29 months ago

        If you have the ability to take a look at either SANS website, and see their articles, or have your system show you all the automatic attacks hitting your machine, then maybe you will understand…

        Botnets are coded to hammer-away at all possible internet-addresses, trying to break-in & highjack more machines, to include in the established criminal-machine that the botnet is…

        SANS said, a decade or 2 ago, that it took, on average, something like 6 or 4 minutes for a new MS-Windows machine to be owned by some attack from the internet.

        I’ve had linux machines cracked/owned, and wiped 'em to get 'em clean.

        Having no immune-system is BAD.

        Linux botnets, apple operating-system botnets, they exist.

        I don’t think there is any operating-system that is connected to the internet that doesn’t have attacks coded to crack it.

        I just looked at SANS.org, and they have totally changed, so they are now … more a moneymaking-machine wanting B2B biz?

        Here, though, are some cheat-sheets they made:

        https://www.sans.org/posters/?msc=main-nav

        They used to tell us the top-20 most effective protections for particular threats, identifying how prevalent the threats were, etc…

        No idea who does that nowadays…

  • slazer2au
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    139 months ago

    Yes, because while I trust my device, I do not trust the Chromecast or the WAP to not be an asshole and fuck with things.

    • @[email protected]
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      29 months ago

      You shouldn’t trust your device. Modern software is insanely complicated, even netbsd had an rce.

      • slazer2au
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        09 months ago

        Trust may be the worng word as Windows will be Windows but I know that no one is going to zero day my devices because I am not that high value of a target.

        • @[email protected]
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          09 months ago

          That’s a bad mentally as well. Most stacks these days are about quantity not quality. If you blindly hit 10000 targets it’s more profitable than trying to spear a single one.

          Akin to not wearing a seatbelt because you are unlikely to be killed by a sniper

  • Possibly linux
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    109 months ago

    Its always a good idea. I have a firewall on my laptop since I travel and connect to many different networks.

    I don’t run any services that would be broadcasting open ports but its always better to be safe

  • Notamoosen
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    99 months ago

    I’d say if you plan on using it any public places, or if you don’t have full control over all the computers/technology in your home network, it’s a good idea to run one. It’s a nice last resort should someone on the same lan have a piece of malicious software.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    No, you don’t. But it’s also not necessarily a bad idea if it’s not going to create issues for you.

    Normally, a software package that wants to talk over IP and only wants to let local software communicate with it can listen only on loopback addresses (like 127.0.0.1). But I have definitely seen software packages that have defaulted to listening to the world (gpsd used to do this by default, for example, which would let anyone in the world who could talk to your machine see precisely where you were). Having a firewall makes the default to be secure – you know that the default is not to be reachable, regardless of what some software author thinks is a good idea.

    Most home systems these days are generally behind a NATting router, which effectively firewalls them against the outside world (though maybe IPv6 will change this), so they can’t be directly reached from the outside anyway, unless a user has set up port forwarding on the router, the systems are effectively firewalled anyway, unless an attacker can get inside the network somehow.

    It’s one more thing that you’re going to have to remember to deal with if you’re installing software and troubleshooting network problems. You install software package X and it isn’t reachable, you’re going to have to figure out how to diagnose problems. As long as this isn’t a problem for you…shrugs

    I don’t personally run firewalls on my desktops. But I have also, over the years, occasionally checked netstat -ntap and discovered that a service that I thought only listened locally was listening to the world, gpsd probably being the most-flagrant example.

    If I were not behind a router, or if I were forwarding all ports to my system, I would be firewalling my desktop systems.

    On a dedicated server, I’d be less worried, because I’m not normally installing tons of random software on the thing. If you aren’t going to firewall it, though, be sure that you’ve checked to see what is listening on the server.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      There is no reason to not leverage a firewall. Plenty of browser based malware can breach your home router and call back out to allow an attacker to explore your network. Windows has included a firewall for over a decade and it’s fine. You can with a single command enable Linux’s built in firewall and be glad you did the bare minimum of cyber security.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        Windows network layer is a desaster. It is so bad, you could currupt the system with Ping in the past.

        I would not say, you should not have a firewall on a desktop, but saying it’s a good idea bc/ windows makes me laugh.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 months ago

      I strongly disagree.

      For example on systems based on Debian (running myself) which simply enables networked services by default running a firewall is a total no brainer. Same is true for literally every Linux distribution with dependency management.

      Especially if someone asks, it is a strong indicator this person should run a firewall.

  • @[email protected]
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    89 months ago

    No - If you are aware which programs open incoming ports. E.g. check with netstat -tulpe

    Yes - If you want to make sure e.g. TCP port 22 or a webserver on 443 etc is only available from IP/Adapter xy. Or if you want to mess with filtering outgoing connections.

  • @[email protected]
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    89 months ago

    You most likely already have one installed, but not enabled. It doesn’t harm anything (maybe you need to allow traffic to ssh or other configuration, but after that you’re all set) and it’s a layer of protection, specially if you need to move between networks (public wifi etc).

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      On Mint the firewall is enabled by default. Setting up firewall rules is pretty easy though, so it’s worth taking five minutes to read up on it.

  • @[email protected]
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    59 months ago

    Yes, because you can forget what services are running and maybe they can be explited.

    An example can be Syncthing which setting are done via web browser at port 8384. If you do not have a firewall, everyone on the same network would be able to change Syncthing settings and then sync your directories to their devices.

    • NaN
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      69 months ago

      Is syncthing listening on all addresses, or only loopback? A firewall would block it, sure, but that would also be bad design.