• Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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      8 months ago

      It’s a bit like saying “having a password on your account is fearmongering, why would anyone try to access your data”.

      It’s only fearmongering until you get attacked, and it’s already too late when you do. Better to be proactive.

      • Daniel@federation.networkOP
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        8 months ago

        @Alaknar@sopuli.xyz @memes@lemmy.world Being proactive doesn’t mean you have to hide your personal service behind a billion dollar company. That is precisely the kind of overreaction triggered by fearmongering. If you don’t know how to secure access points or harden configurations, no service will be able to do it for you as if by magic. Not to mention your responsibility towards your users, who may not want to be tracked by a third-party company without their knowledge every time they visit your site (or half of the internet by now).

        • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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          8 months ago

          If you don’t know how to secure access points or harden configurations, no service will be able to do it for you as if by magic

          That’s the point. Cloudflare does this as if by magic.

          Not to mention your responsibility towards your users, who may not want to be tracked by a third-party company

          Cloudflare doesn’t track your users.

          As a sidenote - am I reading you correctly? Your main issue with Cloudflare is “they’re large”? Like, if they were “two dudes in a basement” and provided the same quality product as they do now, you’d be happy to use their service?

          • Daniel@federation.networkOP
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            8 months ago

            @Alaknar@sopuli.xyz

            That’s the point. Cloudflare does this as if by magic.

            So if you configure your admin account to have an admin:admin credential, Cloudflare will magically solve this? Even if the answer were yes, that would mean handing over your passwords and access details to third-party companies, which is very much disproportionate. I probably wouldn’t trust your website with my data.

            Cloudflare doesn’t track your users.

            With laws like the Patriot and Cloud Act I hope no one actually takes privacy pledges of US companies serious.

            Your main issue with Cloudflare is “they’re large”?

            No, it’s just meant to highlight the absurdity of what some people think is necessary to protect a website in this argument.

            • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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              8 months ago

              So if you configure your admin account to have an admin:admin credential

              You said “If you don’t know how to secure access points or harden configurations”, not “if you’re an absolute moron”.

              With laws like the Patriot and Cloud Act I hope no one actually takes privacy pledges of US companies serious.

              Do you also not believe in the privacy pledges of Signal?

              No, it’s just meant to highlight the absurdity of what some people think is necessary to protect a website

              It’s not “necessary”. It’s convenient, tried and tested, and accessible.

              • Daniel@federation.networkOP
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                8 months ago

                @Alaknar@sopuli.xyz Using Signal is a choice. Luring me to a service from another country that maybe knowingly even uses their own certificates to decrypt my traffic through their reverse proxy is not.

                You said “If you don’t know how to secure access points or harden configurations”, not “if you’re an absolute moron”.

                So where does the moron end and the the magic begin? Comparing something to magic just leaves people with a wrong sense of security that don’t know any better.

                It’s not “necessary”. It’s convenient, tried and tested, and accessible.

                You comparing Cloudflare to having a password on an account really sounded like basic stuff.

                • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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                  8 months ago

                  Luring me to a service from another country that maybe knowingly even uses their own certificates to decrypt my traffic through their reverse proxy is not.

                  I guess, yeah, they could, potentially, do that. Would be massively illegal if they did, and would immediately kill their business, but there technically is a non-zero chance that they might do it.

                  So where does the moron end and the the magic begin? Comparing something to magic just leaves people with a wrong sense of security that don’t know any better.

                  I’m not going to attempt to quantify the skill level at which Cloudflare becomes useful. If you feel like you don’t need them, don’t use them. If you know enough to not need them, you should also understand why many people do.

                  You comparing Cloudflare to having a password on an account really sounded like basic stuff.

                  It was not a 1:1 comparison, mate. I was comparing the concepts of using features that boost your security posture.

                  • Daniel@federation.networkOP
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                    8 months ago

                    @Alaknar@sopuli.xyz

                    I guess, yeah, they could, potentially, do that. Would be massively illegal if they did, and would immediately kill their business, but there technically is a non-zero chance that they might do it.

                    I’m not talking about an “if”, I’m talking about services that Cloudflare actively provides and that may not be transparent to the visitor.
                    https://infosec.exchange/@0xF21D/114178659343887260

                    If you feel like you don’t need them, don’t use them. If you know enough to not need them, you should also understand why many people do.

                    This shouldn’t have to do anything with feelings. If you feel like you need them you probably shouldn’t publicly host stuff on the internet in the first place. You either know you need things, because you did an risk assessment beforehand or you just wildly throw solutions at things that may not even help with the specific issue, while giving away a piece of the sovereignty of the free internet to third-party companies.