|
|
|
|
|
by tjoff
536 days ago
|
|
Doesn't make sense. NAT hole punching requires you to execute on the target inside the NAT. If you are able to do that whatever security you got from NAT has been breached even before NAT hole punching enters the conversation. NAT will block unsolicited incoming connections, that is a great boon for security but obviously not a silver bullet for all network related security issues nor outgoing connections. That has never been a trope. |
|
Why doesn't it make sense to you? From my perspective the idea was that the NAT protects your devices - and your device is now punching a hole into this protection, making it vulnerable to the world wide web
This circumventing doesn't have to be done by a malicious actor, it just comes at the added risk of becoming "targetable" from the Internet