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Forum Discussion
farwest
Oct 30, 2016Aspirant
Which NAS for SOHO encryption, remote access?
I am looking for a NAS for my small business. Budget $1,000 to $1,500. The NAS would be hanging off the SOHO LAN, which in turn hangs off an unmanaged 16-port Gigabit switch close to where the bro...
farwest
Oct 31, 2016Aspirant
Thank you for that very helpful reply. I had vaguely assumed that ReadyCloud basically offered a gateway to "find" the device and some kind of handshaking but if it actually requires access to the data then there is no point. I might as well give up and go with Dropbox (which I do not currently use without encrypting files beforehand).
For that reason your pointer regarding OpenVPN is interesting. I shall have to take a close and careful look as my setup is a little complex, with two phone lines, each with its own router and one 4G router, passing through a Peplink load balancer, then the switch. Homework time I guess.
StephenB
Oct 31, 2016Guru - Experienced User
farwest wrote:
Thank you for that very helpful reply. I had vaguely assumed that ReadyCloud basically offered a gateway to "find" the device and some kind of handshaking but if it actually requires access to the data then there is no point.
ReadyCloud acts as a NAT traversal server + VPN. The NAS connects outbound through the firewall to the server. You can access the NAS files either through a web portal, or from a client on your PC and/or mobile device.
ReadyCloud also requires use of Netgear user accounts for authentication. Netgear uses MyNetgear accounts for everything now, with SSO (single sign on) used here, Netgear Support, and ReadyCloud.
From a security perspective, if you use ReadyCloud you are trusting Netgear to keep your MyNetgear credentials safe, to ensure that someone can't access your NAS via the portal w/o your credentials, and to ensure that the data transfered on the path between the NAS and your remote device is securely encrypted and defended from man-in-the-middle attacks.
Note I'm not saying people shouldn't use it - I'm just trying to articulate what users need to trust Netgear to do.
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