On 2020-08-03 04:55, George N. White III wrote:
On Mon, 3 Aug 2020 at 08:19, ToddAndMargo via users <users@lists.fedoraproject.org <mailto:users@lists.fedoraproject.org>> wrote:

    Okay, lets look at this as a network detective.

    You start only know that there are two network connections.
    One to the to Internet, which I will call the *Black* connection.
    The other one to the internal network, which I will call the
    *Red* connection.  You need to know which is which.


Batten the hatches -- you may be attracting attention you don't
want.   More descriptive names will avoid the "names can hurt
me" problem, maybe "int*er*net" or "public" versus "int*ra*net" or
"private".

--
George N. White III

It is disturbing that it has come to this.  I hope
the Religion of the Perpetually Offended goes
away soon.

If you are interested the Red and Black comes from:


Red/black concept
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red/black_concept


    The red/black concept, sometimes called the
    red–black architecture[1] or red/black engineering,
    [2][3] refers to the careful segregation in
    cryptographic systems of signals that contain
    sensitive or classified plaintext information
    (red signals) from those that carry encrypted
    information, or ciphertext (black signals).
    Therefore the red side is usually considered
    the internal side, and the black side the more
    public side, with often some sort of guard,
    firewall or data-diode between the two.
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