Central Texas network security cleanup

Network Security Cleanup That Starts With Visibility

Fla5h Tech helps Central Texas businesses understand what is exposed, what is trusted, and what should be cleaned up before a rushed firewall, VPN, DNS, or Wi-Fi change causes downtime.

Firewall and rule review
VPN and remote access cleanup
Wi-Fi and segmentation planning
DNS and public exposure checks

When network cleanup becomes urgent

Remote access feels unclear

Old VPN paths, shared accounts, exposed admin tools, or unclear recovery steps create risk that leadership cannot easily see.

Firewall rules have no owner

Rules that were added for one project can remain active for years. We review intent before changing production access.

Guest Wi-Fi and business systems are too close

Network cleanup can separate guest, IoT, administrative, and business traffic into safer trust zones.

DNS or public services are changing

Website and email changes need staging, validation, and rollback discipline so uptime and mail delivery are protected.

Network security decision guide

SignalWhat Fla5h Tech reviewsBest next action
Remote access grew quickly.VPN paths, administrative exposure, account ownership, MFA assumptions, and recovery options.Schedule a network review.
Wi-Fi or guest access is mixed together.Segmentation, guest traffic, IoT devices, business systems, and practical trust-zone planning.Map traffic boundaries before changing rules.
DNS, email, or public services are being changed.Website records, mail authentication, rollback steps, validation checks, and business continuity risk.Review managed IT support.
Cyber insurance or vendor questions are coming.Documentation, exposure notes, remote access assumptions, backup readiness, and plain-English remediation priorities.Start with FlashShield.

What the cleanup process includes

  1. Discovery: identify business systems, vendors, remote access paths, network zones, and critical services.
  2. Visibility: document what is public, what is internal, what is trusted, and what is unclear.
  3. Risk prioritization: separate urgent exposure from routine cleanup so changes are staged safely.
  4. Remediation roadmap: provide plain-English next steps for firewall rules, VPN, Wi-Fi, DNS, access, and documentation.
  5. Validation: confirm important changes from the user side and preserve website and email continuity.

Common network security problems

  • Old firewall rules nobody wants to touch.
  • Remote access added quickly and never reviewed.
  • Guest Wi-Fi mixed too closely with business systems.
  • Devices on the network without clear ownership.
  • Public-facing services that need safer staging.
  • No plain-English diagram of how the network works.

Built for Central Texas businesses

Fla5h Tech supports network security cleanup for small businesses, professional offices, and independent practices across San Antonio, Boerne, Kerrville, the Austin corridor, the Texas Hill Country, and Central Texas.

Related pages: San Antonio cybersecurity, Boerne managed IT, Kerrville managed IT security, and Austin corridor managed IT.

Network security FAQ

Should every old firewall rule be removed immediately?

No. Fla5h Tech reviews the current state first, documents intent, and stages changes so production systems, public websites, and business email are protected.

Can this help before a cyber insurance renewal?

Yes. A network review can clarify remote access, public exposure, segmentation, and documentation gaps before renewal questions become urgent.

Does network cleanup require replacing everything?

No. The first goal is visibility. Some environments need configuration cleanup, better documentation, or safer access paths before any hardware replacement is considered.

Can Fla5h Tech help with DNS or email-related changes?

Yes, but those changes should be staged carefully. Fla5h Tech protects mail delivery, website availability, and rollback options during DNS or email work.

Know what is exposed before changing the network

Start with a focused review of your firewall, VPN, Wi-Fi, DNS, public services, and documentation gaps. You will get practical priorities without unnecessary scare language.

Schedule A Network Review

Security note: Do not send passwords, private keys, recovery codes, or sensitive internal diagrams through a public website form.

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