I was one of those who VTCed, and though I can't remember my choice of reason it's clear it wasn't "product recommendation". Here's what I think now. * Firstly, it's a "*please fix my iptables*" question that doesn't post the **complete, live** ruleset (`iptables -L -n -v`); those are damned from minute one, in my eyes. While a quick update can rescue such a question, after seven years it seemed unlikely in this case. * I dislike such questions anyway, as the solution details are often highly specific to the ruleset in question (I miss the old "too narrow" close reason); to make them scale to others, an answer has to be written that becomes a general primer on iptables, and *that* is too broad / a request for learning materials. * The question, being unanswerable in its present form (no live ruleset) was still attracting noob-quality "here's what worked for me" answers seven years after it was asked. The author clearly has no intention of cleaning up behind him/herself, so closing it was pretty much a mercy killing in that it stopped any more ill-thought-out answers from being posted. Without endorsing Womble's attitude to hand-written iptables rulesets (I do those all the time, but then I actually *did* [write the book][1] on it :) I would also like to see the question burninated. But closing it is nearly as good. [1]: https://www.wiley.com/legacy/compbooks/catalog/35366-3.htm