If I restore a jffs backup I have, will that revert skynet to the version before? Sorry, I never really understood the jffs partition.
Thanks
I don’t disagree with your conclusion, but can you explain this particular reasoning?partly due to a pure IPV4 connection using NAT shouldn't really be needing it;
I don’t disagree with your conclusion, but can you explain this particular reasoning?
The normal firewall (sans Skynet) will block all incoming unsolicited traffic by default. When you open ports for VPN, Remote SSH, Remote Web, Port Forwards, etc. you are susceptible to the bad guys probing your WAN IP address for those open ports. The firewall won't help you if you've specifically asked it to allow these ports to be open. This is where Skynet would help keep the bad guys out but let your own unsolicited traffic come in.My understanding is that NAT acts as a firewall itself and will prevent unsolicited "foreign" entities from connecting, if the connection was not initiated by a device behind the firewall.
The normal firewall (sans Skynet) will block all incoming unsolicited traffic by default. When you open ports for VPN, Remote SSH, Remote Web, Port Forwards, etc. you are susceptible to the bad guys probing your WAN IP address for those open ports. The firewall won't help you if you've specifically asked it to allow these ports to be open. This is where Skynet would help keep the bad guys out but let your own unsolicited traffic come in.
If you have no ports open to the WAN, then I agree Skynet's inbound blocking isn't as useful as its outbound blocking.
I switched off skynet a few mounts back because of the speed issue as well. At that time I thought it was a problem with spdMerlin until I realised it was Skynet doing that.I've decided to stop using Skynet and uninstalled it.
Partly due to the 7.3.0 shenanigans; partly due to a pure IPV4 connection using NAT shouldn't really be needing it; and partly due to the on-router Speedtest going up by about 100-130mbps after uninstalling Skynet.
I for one am very thankful to have and use Skynet!
I'm trying to show support to the developer
Folks use Skynet to protect themselves against known bad actors on their open and forwarded ports, as well as on connections originating from their LAN towards the Internet and/or what comes back, all of which aren't protected by the built in firewall or NAT. The IOT blocking feature is the cherry on the cake, a very well baked one.Folks who don't know well what exactly Skynet is doing believe they are doomed without it. Nothing even close.
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