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random access issues


ryekye
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Why am I getting random backdoor access attacks and more only while using the r3 or xr1000 my asus was picking up alot of attacks through the r3 and xr1000 which in my opinion is not good nor do I like these attempts being caught on asus for protection it makes me not want to use the xr1000 or r3 anymore with all these weird attacks and attempts!!!Screenshot_20240228-091621_Firefox.thumb.jpg.67a193bd9aeed6b3ed03dd913220650f.jpg

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Hey just a question, when you put your r3 behind your Asus router in DMZ, does the AI protection still work for the R3 even though it's in DMZ? Thinking of doing the same with my tp-link archer ax11000 Homecare.

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41 minutes ago, Proud R3 Owner said:

Hey just a question, when you put your r3 behind your Asus router in DMZ, does the AI protection still work for the R3 even though it's in DMZ? Thinking of doing the same with my tp-link archer ax11000 Homecare.

Ya it does the ai protection does still work you seen the pic that's even with dmz

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1 hour ago, Netduma Fraser said:

Could you provide more info on the destination/source of them? 

like the ips?

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1 hour ago, Netduma Fraser said:

Could you provide more info on the destination/source of them? 

it was scary to see those

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4 hours ago, ryekye said:

it was scary to see those

However, this should not scare you too much. This is pretty normal when devices are made accessible from the Internet.


These are regular attacks on the IP address ranges, with the hope that the attacker will get lucky with an IP at some point. Your router itself is constantly exposed to such attacks, but apparently does not indicate this to itself.


If you have a Microsoft account, for example, and authenticate yourself with a password, you should take a look at the login activities in the security dashboard. There you can see how often attempts are made to illegally access your Microsoft account.

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17 hours ago, ChrisG82 said:

However, this should not scare you too much. This is pretty normal when devices are made accessible from the Internet.


These are regular attacks on the IP address ranges, with the hope that the attacker will get lucky with an IP at some point. Your router itself is constantly exposed to such attacks, but apparently does not indicate this to itself.


If you have a Microsoft account, for example, and authenticate yourself with a password, you should take a look at the login activities in the security dashboard. There you can see how often attempts are made to illegally access your Microsoft account.

I get those on a daily!

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