StoneChucker
22nd November 2006, 18:16
Yeah, I know, always asking for help, hardly ever giving it... One day I'll turn the tables.
It seems the faster and higher tech you go, the more things you have to tweak. This is in regard to World of Warcraft (online game), and the patches it downloads (mostly by peer to peer but also direct http), for me, after I exit the game. After I changed from ihug ADSL broadband with a D-Link DSL-G604T router, to TelstraClear cable broadband with a D-Link DIR-635 RangeBooster router, I noticed that the Blizzard downloader window showed a yellow light, with an error saying you are behind a firewall, and a link to the solution on how to setup popular brands of Firewall software for World of Warcraft. It also had another solution and link to how to setup popular brands of routers to work with World of Warcraft, using port forwarding (called virtual servers on older routers).
So, I setup my firewall software to allow the required sequence/range of ports to be accessed by Blizzard. Then I setup my router's DHCP settings to assign me the same IP address every time (static IP), and finished by setting up port forwarding on my router to allow the required range/sequence of ports to be accessed and directed to my IP address. Sweet, everything's working perfectly now, oddly enough this is not the problem... (btw, D-Link's new routers are really helpful with you being able to choose from preset applications for port forwarding, and World of Warcraft is one of them!)
My question is, is it secure/safe to have port forwarding (on router) and firewall ports access setup in terms of online security? Can this enable someone to gain access to any aspect of my system that they previously would have not been able to?
Should I disable the port forwarding and firewall ports access, and only enable them when I see the Blizzard downloader trying to download more patches? That is pretty simple I think, the router and firewall softwre have a tick next to what you setup, I'm assuming if you remove the tick the settings will stay there, but be inactive?
Cheers :)
It seems the faster and higher tech you go, the more things you have to tweak. This is in regard to World of Warcraft (online game), and the patches it downloads (mostly by peer to peer but also direct http), for me, after I exit the game. After I changed from ihug ADSL broadband with a D-Link DSL-G604T router, to TelstraClear cable broadband with a D-Link DIR-635 RangeBooster router, I noticed that the Blizzard downloader window showed a yellow light, with an error saying you are behind a firewall, and a link to the solution on how to setup popular brands of Firewall software for World of Warcraft. It also had another solution and link to how to setup popular brands of routers to work with World of Warcraft, using port forwarding (called virtual servers on older routers).
So, I setup my firewall software to allow the required sequence/range of ports to be accessed by Blizzard. Then I setup my router's DHCP settings to assign me the same IP address every time (static IP), and finished by setting up port forwarding on my router to allow the required range/sequence of ports to be accessed and directed to my IP address. Sweet, everything's working perfectly now, oddly enough this is not the problem... (btw, D-Link's new routers are really helpful with you being able to choose from preset applications for port forwarding, and World of Warcraft is one of them!)
My question is, is it secure/safe to have port forwarding (on router) and firewall ports access setup in terms of online security? Can this enable someone to gain access to any aspect of my system that they previously would have not been able to?
Should I disable the port forwarding and firewall ports access, and only enable them when I see the Blizzard downloader trying to download more patches? That is pretty simple I think, the router and firewall softwre have a tick next to what you setup, I'm assuming if you remove the tick the settings will stay there, but be inactive?
Cheers :)