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Latest coverage for Proxy

Proxy servers can mask network origins, filter traffic, and create security risks when attackers abuse them for evasion or unauthorized access.

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Background for this topic.

A proxy is an intermediary that sends requests to a destination and returns responses, so the client and destination do not communicate directly. A forward proxy represents users or systems making outbound connections; a reverse proxy represents an application or service to inbound clients and may route traffic, terminate TLS, or enforce authentication. This tag generally concerns these network components, not browser-based privacy tools alone.

Security depends heavily on configuration and trust boundaries. A forward proxy can enforce egress policy and provide useful logs, but an exposed or misconfigured one may permit unauthorized relaying, while proxy logs can reveal sensitive browsing or business activity. TLS inspection requires controlled certificate deployment and careful handling of decrypted traffic. Reverse proxies reduce direct exposure of back-end services, but access controls must not rely solely on them, and forwarded client-IP headers must be trusted only from known proxies. During investigations, proxy logs help reconstruct connections, but shared addresses and address translation can complicate attribution.

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Krebs on Security 10 months, 3 weeks ago

DSLRoot, Proxies, and the Threat of ‘Legal Botnets’

The cybersecurity community on Reddit responded in disbelief this month when a self-described Air National Guard member with top secret security clearance began questioning the arrangement they'd made with company called DSLRoot, which was paying $250 a month to plug a pair of laptops into the Redditor's high-speed Internet connection in the United States. This post examines the history and provenance of DSLRoot, one of the oldest "residential proxy" networks with origins in Russia and Eastern Europe.