Event JSON
{
"id": "b860c52e575afdeea1d3ef87652e64e7c46bbe5cb26a4b8e860a58c3f9768d83",
"pubkey": "a7c52d2c39a960e21e7dbe09e0e2a54f3470a785361f861f22d90f145b54d15c",
"created_at": 1688246637,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"4a0a2a4b55a48da4cfed2f36ee148fe5a1265be9308db9b003852fe7a3fdecb4",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"3e17322803bcb6eb05646880976f94c4aee452eb66e4894b0ce3cd9482af2c00",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"e",
"f6da97118586f583602112361293d21f0d133779f26b7d4ccebee8bbb78813b4",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"mostr",
"https://mastodon.falconk.rocks/users/falcon/statuses/110640931628093391"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub1fg9z5j645jx6fnld9umwu9y0uksjvklfxzxmnvqrs5h70glaaj6qerdn8a I'm completely unconvinced that stateful firewalls in the edge device are actually necessary for security. Sure, maybe someone can exploit your TCP/IP stack with 0day, but what's more likely to have it - the device that gets constant updates, or the router that gets them basically never? The thing to do here is probably have a host firewall, at which point the host can just open ports on itself to the internet when needed.",
"sig": "3fd4a32b212a83f9f1e879e92bd7d6701a2a4e30f0f99a30a2cf59bf86c4c024bb4a02b2c4a6d121404127abb55bb10fea822cca411255906193fb4e89f1d742"
}