That is odd. You are using a vpn and still see them trying to connect. Luckily I am only seeing UI3 I have and old phone logins etc but nothing suspicious.Status button at the top.
Yes. What do the log in attempts on BI Status - Connections look like? I am just curious. I didn't think it could be accessed.Cameras are on their own subnet. Login attempts are for BI. BI and server it runs on are protected by an uncrackable passwords.
But then I dont understand what pfblocker adds for value if the attempts are for BI from WAN and you havent publish it externally?Cameras are on their own subnet. Login attempts are for BI. BI and server it runs on are protected by an uncrackable passwords.
Nice. What are you using to run it. I am trying to find a little computer that might do the job. So do you use vlans or just 2 network cards?No one has gained access but I'm still concerned and prefer that people in China, Russia and whatever other country I choose to block do not get past my router. Simple as that.
My BI server has 2 network interfaces. One for the cams (192.168.5.XX) and the other for Internet. (192.168.1.xx).
PFBlocker does the job.
That would clear up some confusion. Open ports I did see odd connections. With asus/openvpn seems much better.@Sparkey sounds like you have open ports? Port forwarding generally a bad idea. Any particular reason?
Most of us set up OpenVPN for remote access and do not expose any ports.
I average 2300 per HOUR, with peaks of over 4000 per HOUR between firewall port scans and WIFI ASSOC scans both of which I log to syslogd server.you'd literally see hundreds of connection attempts a day