…without snark or jumping down my throat. I genuinely want to know why it’s so unsafe.

I’m running a Synology DS920+, with my DSM login exposed through a Cloudflare tunnel. I have 2FA enabled, Synology firewall enabled with these rules in place. I also have this IP blocklist enabled.

After all of this, how would someone be able to break in via the DSM login?

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Much more likely to gain access via a compromised desktop, or smart phone.

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The NAS runs its own OS and is just as vulnerable as a desktop or smartphones. They’re all computers.

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Yes, but the other computers I listed have a person behind them that will click things. Like a “close” button that actually installs malware. A NAS does not click things.

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True, but, what if you host VMs on the NAS? Or data for some application? Those can result in an attacker running code on them, and from there, in most homelab networks, i assume is a short way from owning everything in your network

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