cm0002@mander.xyz to Programming@programming.dev · 1 month agoWe Mass-Deployed 15-Year-Old Screen Sharing Technology and It's Actually Betterblog.helix.mlexternal-linkmessage-square51linkfedilinkarrow-up1189
arrow-up1189external-linkWe Mass-Deployed 15-Year-Old Screen Sharing Technology and It's Actually Betterblog.helix.mlcm0002@mander.xyz to Programming@programming.dev · 1 month agomessage-square51linkfedilink
minus-squareatzanteol@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up16·1 month ago UDP — Blocked. Deprioritized. Dropped. “Security risk.” It’s this actually a thing? I’ve never seen any corporate network that blocks UDP. HTTP/3 will even rely on it.
minus-squareThe_Decryptor@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up5·1 month agoYep, same way people block all ICMP and then wonder why stuff breaks.
minus-squareStripedMonkey@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkarrow-up3·1 month agoYes. Quic and other protocols are too new and don’t have a ton of support in firewall and inspection tools that are used by said corpos. It’s even required in the DISA STIG requirements to disable quic at the browser level.
minus-squaremoonpiedumplings@programming.devlinkfedilinkarrow-up2·1 month agoYes. My high school used to do this. UDP blocked except for DNS to some specific servers, and probably some other needed things.
It’s this actually a thing? I’ve never seen any corporate network that blocks UDP. HTTP/3 will even rely on it.
Yep, same way people block all ICMP and then wonder why stuff breaks.
Yes. Quic and other protocols are too new and don’t have a ton of support in firewall and inspection tools that are used by said corpos. It’s even required in the DISA STIG requirements to disable quic at the browser level.
Yes. My high school used to do this. UDP blocked except for DNS to some specific servers, and probably some other needed things.