Small manufacturers should review remote access, admin access, unused rules, vendor exceptions, outbound controls, and logging because weak firewall management often survives for years unnoticed.
Firewall Rules Every Small Manufacturer Should Review
Many small manufacturers have a firewall, but fewer know which rules are still needed, who approved them, or whether vendor access is actually controlled the way leadership assumes.
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The first rules and settings to review
- Remote management and remote desktop exposure
- VPN accounts and old user access
- Vendor rules that stayed open after the work was done
- Admin access from overly broad source locations
- Logging, alerting, and who actually reviews it
Why manufacturers end up with messy firewalls
Because every exception looked reasonable at the time. New vendor, new machine, new controller, new remote support request. Over time the rule set becomes a history of quick fixes instead of a controlled baseline.
How to make the firewall part of a real security baseline
Treat the firewall as a managed control with named ownership, documented vendor access, and periodic review. Sun Life Tech usually pairs Firewall and Endpoint Protection for Manufacturers with Managed IT for Manufacturers and Manufacturing Cybersecurity Assessment for exactly that reason.
Need Help With This?
If your firewall has been accumulating vendor rules and exceptions for years, now is the time to review it before it becomes the weak point nobody noticed.
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Recommended resources
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FAQ
Quick answers to common questions.
Yes. Old exceptions often create unnecessary exposure and nobody remembers why they still exist.
Vendor access should be limited, documented, reviewed, and tied to actual support need instead of permanent convenience.
Yes, if the firewall has clear ownership, routine review, and practical support around it.
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