Comment on Any recommendations of countries to block from server logins?
sf1tzp@programming.dev 1 year agoOof yeah. You’re well into admin territory here.
I mean I’m just some layman on the internet, but I would look at tying in some authentication layer to get your 2FA, although it would inconvenience your users users.
Do your users use this service for srs business?
I don’t know if I have anything else to add to this discussion. It’s gotten more complex than what “just an email server” can provide imo
Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz 1 year ago
No worries and thanks for the comments. I’ll figure out something, I always do, I just thought it would be nice to see what route others have taken with their own servers. I’m really annoyed but it seems like more people are just turning their email over to big corporations. Hell the place I work turned their email over to Microsoft and we’ve had nothing but non-stop spam, phishing attacks, outages, and the constant push of “oh if you’re not going to use a Microsoft product (on my linux machine) then we’re won’t even talk to you” in the years since then, and literally everybody in my department complains about it.
sf1tzp@programming.dev 1 year ago
Yeah for sure. Sorry I don’t have a good answer
Just wanna share that my experience does not mirror this. I pay them $6/ user per month (which is just me, for me, personally], to be fair), which gets me that hosted exchange server 365 thing. I only use MS 365 products in my browser, and have no complaints. I don’t require any of the features that are locked behind full-installation variants of their products - and besides that I’ve had no problem with spam email especially.
Im not sure I would recommend that you tell your friends to authenticate with your own Active directory instance necessarily, but ultimately at the end of the day if you’re dealing with
users
you’ll need some kind of authentication (imo)