I was considering getting a SSL certificate.
I have searched the forum for an answer to the type of server Blue Iris uses (Apache, IIS or ??).
The company that I want to acquire SSL certificate from, asks this question.
Thanks,
I think that if you're out of your house and using someone else's WiFi to connect back to your BI, it's technically possible for someone else on the same WiFi network to be able to capture the network packets and be able to see the video you're watching as well. stunnel will prevent that. Having stunnel setup with a properly-signed SSL certificate would stop the warnings you get when you use stunnel with a self-signed SSL certificate.Is there a need or good reason for the average person to use stunnel and \ or certificates? I have looked at it and it seems a bit complicated for me.
With stunnel, you still have to forward a port to your BI box, so you can still have the potential issue where anyone on the Internet can be connecting to that port and trying to get into your BI box.I was planning to figure out the VPN thing after reading the VPN for noobs posts, but is stunnel an alternative option or am I misunderstanding the security \ purpose for using stunnel?
IMO, it'd be worse if you had port-forwarded to your cameras. No knowing if Dahua and Hik has fixed all of the backdoors and bugs that people exploit to gain access to the camera without having to know any of the usernames/passwords you setup. I trust that Ken from BI does a better job of keeping the web-server piece of BI patched and back-door free. Honestly, I'd guess that the majority of BI installs are setup how you are, and <knock on wood>, I haven't heard of any getting hacked. But not having any port-forwarding (because you're using a VPN) is safest.Right now I am temporarily using the BI Automatic UP&P port forward wizard setup to connect and view through the phone app, which as I understand it from reading here is like the worst \ least secure thing I can do, correct?
UPNP is just another way to setup port forwarding. It allows devices and applications to setup port forwarding on your router without you having to know how to do it.I think port forwarding is safer than up&p. At least from the way I read things.
Those are great best practices to follow, but remember that bugs (and back-door user accounts that weren't visible) in the web servers running on both Hikvision and Dahua cameras allowed people to gain access to those devices without having to guess user names or passwords.That and I changed it so only admin is local and assigned names to users so someone would have to guess the user name and password.
I'm using port-forwarding as well!In the end they are outside cameras. All of my cams have been upgraded to the latest firmwares.