Reverse proxies can be useful for hiding your IP if you do something like host it in a VPS and tunnel the traffic back to your self hosted service. There's also a lot of documentation on attaching things like fail2ban or crowd sec which can be helpful in reducing the threat from attacks. if you're running lots of services it can reduce the risk of two apps using the same ports as ultimately everything will go through ports 80 and 443 on the public facing side. Finally again if you're hosting several services having a central place to manage and deal with cert from can save a lot of time rather than having to wrangle it per service/ server.
egonallanon
Speaking from the more sysadmin side of things it can certainly feel that some days. Particularly with the never ending wave of half baked saas apps that my org seems to love acquiring.
Under delivering yet again Sean. I want my deaf children!
First major plant since the 90s? Does Hinckley point C not count as a major nuclear plant?
Ah good this means I can continue to safely ignore it when I migrate.
So we all forgot the premise of "They Live" and are having to learn in again huh?
A drunk one.
Ah deathgasm. Love that movie.
Some say that to this day the weasel is still there being accelerated ever closer to the speed of light.
Yeah this is why I'm withholding praise for the moment. Once this covers a lot more parts I shall sing philips' virtues to the stars.
Gentlemen this is democracy manifest!