On 01/22/2016 12:37 AM, David Kramer wrote:
If I can get by with a dynamic IP address I can get 150Mbps
symmetrical from Verizon for less than I'm paying for the 20-30Mbps
I'm getting now. In researching it though, about half the articles
say it should be fine, and half the articles point out how it's super
dangerous and you can end up having your mail sent to someone else's
server if your IP address gets assigned to them.
I would love to get your opinions (or even better, facts) on how
dangerous it would be to run a web and mail server on a dynamic IP. I
think Matt was asking about that too.
I think the biggest problem is outbound main being blocked for being a
dynamic IP.
I am toying with getting faster dynamic IP service for less, but
bouncing through a static IP in the cloud. Maybe I have two networks
internally at home. (They can run on the same wire.) One would be a NAT
of the dynamic service, and one would be somehow tunneled through a
virtual machine at Linode or Digitalocean. (What is the easiest and most
reliable way to do that?)
-kb
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