Hi folks. So, I know due to a myriad of reasons I should not allow Jellyfin access to the open internet. However, in trying to switch family over from Plex, I’ll need something that “just works”.

How are people solving this problem? I’ve thought about a few solutions, like whitelisting ips (which can change of course), or setting up VPN or tail scale (but then that is more work than they will be willing to do on their side). I can even add some level of auth into my reverse proxy, but that would break Jellyfin clients.

Wondering what others have thought about for this problem

  • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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    15 hours ago

    Fine is a relative term

    You probably are fine but the company who is getting attacked by your compromised machine isn’t

    • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      I don’t think jellyfin vulnerabilities could lead to a zombified machine. At least I’ve not read about something like that happening.

      Most Jellyfin issues I know are related to unauthorized API calls of the backend.

      • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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        31 minutes ago

        I think it is a matter of time honestly.

        Jellyfin has grown enough in popularity that it is likely a target for a state actor looking to create some minions. Just because there isn’t any known remote code execution vulnerabilities doesn’t mean there couldn’t be one in the future.

        Maybe I’m being paranoid but it seems way safer to just not expose Jellyfin.