>> It's *just* a home connection? No services? Nuke the connection >> attempt. > > If you're on a network with DHCP (most residential connections), > it's possible someone else wrote an app that points to a DNS > name that points to your IP address. Still safe to nuke it.
When you say "nuke the connection attempt" do you mean kill the process that's attempting to open the connection? I can't, because it's an inbound connection and that process is (apparently) somewhere inside Facebook. I only have control over the response at my end which, in my case, is nothing at all since the port is blocked, with failed attempts logged as shown. An nmap scan of the machines behind my firewall currently shows nothing (legitimate or otherwise) listening on port 443, so I don't have any suspects to "nuke" at the moment here inside the walls. I was mostly just wondering if these connection attempts are examples of some intentional Facebook behavior, or whether I should instead bring it to their attention as evidence that one of their systems (or personnel) may have been compromised. _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/