this post was submitted on 26 Jun 2023
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Selfhosted

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Hello friends, I am considering self hosting on my desktop computer, which already has gentoo Linux installed. But my concern is that my regular desktop use could compromise the security of self hosted applications, which tend to handle private user data.

What can I do to secure myself against this threat?

For example, browsers on their own are a security nightmare. You are running arbitrary remote scripts, and there's no telling the extent of damage they do (most websites out there doing extensive tracking).

What can I do to secure my self hosted applications while running them on the same machine? Is there something I can do to somehow isolate browsers and other sketchy applications from the damage they could possibly do?

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[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Maybe just don't run your services under your regular user account?

Create one or more new user accounts and run them that way. Make sure not to give your regular user account any access to the data in the new accounts.

That doesn't stop all attacks: side-channel attacks (Spectre?) can still happen, and your machine can for example still run out of memory and break your services that way, but it's a solid start.