

Auth portal for VPN tunnell -> Authelia -> fail2ban -> VLAN with services only.
ELK stack monitors the LAN. (Including VLAN)
Keep that VLAN segmented. You’re good unless you’re a DOGE employee, then I’d recommend quite a bit more security.
Auth portal for VPN tunnell -> Authelia -> fail2ban -> VLAN with services only.
ELK stack monitors the LAN. (Including VLAN)
Keep that VLAN segmented. You’re good unless you’re a DOGE employee, then I’d recommend quite a bit more security.
Touch.
His.
Butt.
You’re holding onto a long-standing misconception: Linux is not inherently more secure than Windows. In fact, the opposite can be true.
The reason Linux seems safer is because it has a much smaller market share. Attackers don’t build massive botnets to target misconfigured Linux systems the way they do for Windows. But that’s not security—that’s just security through obscurity, which doesn’t hold up if someone is targeting you specifically.
Let me clarify my earlier point about “a link for you to click.” If an attacker is specifically targeting someone using Linux, they’re not any better protected than someone on Windows. At that point, it comes down to how well the user understands and secures their system.
The key difference? Windows actively warns you about misconfigurations that open you up to attack. For example, try enabling Remote Desktop Protocol—Windows will warn you repeatedly about the risks. Linux, on the other hand, won’t stop you. You can misconfigure SSH, open ports, or skip updates without a single warning. If someone’s after you and you’ve made a mistake? You’re toast.
Linux is powerful, but it doesn’t hold your hand the way Windows does. If you think it’s inherently secure, you’re just relying on the fact that fewer bots are looking for you—not that the system itself is protecting you.
I’ve got a link for you to click, Mr super secure OS user. I promise your OS will protect you.
If you think being on Linux makes you immune for attacks, I have bad news for you.
If you’ll be running Linux and trying to use steam to run games, at all, avoid the 14th gen is.
If not, the 14th gen i9 is your bet.
Something with Proton, the layer that makes steam work with Linux, has been causing tons of people a lot of grief myself included. Any games that rely heavily on vulkan shaders will cause my whole system to crash under heavy load. It’s a known thing and Intel still seems clueless as to what to do to resolve it, afaik.