Our family mail server quit working today. Maybe it's a bit long in the tooth...
Apparently I installed that thing in 2006 and I last updated it in 2016, then I quit updating it for some reason that I totally forgot. Probably laziness...
It's been running for quite some time and we kind of forgot about it in the closet, until the SSH tunnel we use to get our mail outside our home stopped working because modern openssh clients refuse to use the antiquated key cipher I setup client machines with way back when any longer.
I just generated new keys with a more modern cipher that it understands (ecdsa-sha2-nistp256) and left it running. Because why not đ
There's been an awful lot of RCEs in the past two decades and uh, if that's rawdogging the internet, I'm honestly shocked you haven't been hit with any by now.
Did you really only use it when you were home? If you used it outside the firewall then port 25 must have been open also.
I used to run my own server and this was in the early 90s. Then one day, perusing the logs I realized I was not smart enough on the security front to even attempt such a thing. It was quickly shut down and the MX record moved to an outsourced mail provider.
Most 'hackers' are just mid tier (mediocre) IT level types who rely on existing exploits floating around in the wild. It'd probably be hard to find any still in circulation for such an old system.
I'm fairly certain that SSH and whatever else you're exposing has had vulnerabilities fixed since then, especially if modern distros refuse to use the ssh key you were using, this screams of "we found something so critical here we don't want to touch it". If your server exposes anything in a standard port, e.g. SSH on 22, you probably should do a fresh install (although I would definitely not know how to rebuild a system I built almost 20 years ago).
That being said, it's amazing that an almost 20 year old system can work for almost 10 years without touching anything.
Patience. It really helps to have all the latest set up: SPF, DKIM, DMARC. Then after that it's a matter of IP reputation, you can email the various blocklists and you wait for the rest of them to clear on their own.
I've had that IP for 10 years and it has never sent spam, and I've sent enough emails that people open that it actually does get through fine. I haven't had to think about it for a long time, it just keeps on working. Barely had to even adjust my Postfix config through the upgrades.
This is true. If you have DMARC and your RUA set up (with a working email (or one that doesn't bounce at least)) along with SPF and DKIM, Google and MS will accept your mail. The only time it won't at that point is if your IP is in the same /24 as a known spammer but so long as the spam stops, you'll fall off the list. Some of the common spamlists allow you to request your IP be removed by request and I can only recall one list that almost nobody uses that makes you pay for the removal though there may be more I don't recall.
Genuinely surprised when I see people running mail servers without issue. I suppose getting in relatively early means you're not immediately sent to junk mail lists by the big players.
Unfortunately that's not true. I've been running mail servers under my domain since around 2000, almost as long as Microsoft has been running Hotmail, and I was certainly following good standards like SPF and DKIM well before they considered such a thing... and yet Microsoft is the bane of my mail server's existence. Despite no compromises resulting in spam blasts, MS still regularly shuts me out with no reason given and no hits showing on their monitors. If I can find their email address to ask what the problem is, I get a generic "your domain has been cleared" sort of reply but never any reason why they blocked me in the first place.
You need SPF, DKIM, DMARC with a RUA set up to an email that doesn't bounce. That's pretty much it. I've been running email servers a long time and actually set up email from a new domain/IP a couple of years ago as well.
Nah you can use ghetto smtp to relay incoming mail to a different port on your server if your ISP blocks incoming 25 and sendinblue (it's changed names but my sendinblue config is still working) to send outgoing mail if they block outgoing 25. It's less than ideal but doable for low volume private email servers.
I still remember all the conspiracies surrounding NIST and now 25519 is the default standard.
In 2013, interest began to increase considerably when it was discovered that the NSA had potentially implemented a backdoor into the P-256 curve based Dual_EC_DRBG algorithm.[11] While not directly related,[12] suspicious aspects of the NIST's P curve constants[13] led to concerns[14] that the NSA had chosen values that gave them an advantage in breaking the encryption.[15][16]
I hope you get your data off and then burn it and everything around it. It could be easily compromised you knowing. It could easily be used for spamming
Eh, plenty of dos machines still used in banks and industry. Itâs both scary and impressive. I have worked on cnc machines only a few years back that were from the 80s I think. The data transfer between the computer and the machine used a band of paper that had holes punched into it by a printer like device physically attached to the computer.
Any OS can break and need reinstalling if you screw stuff up, but the majority of them would have a hard time running constantly for almost a decade without so much as a side glance.