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The most dangerous thing in a server room is often the phrase, “Don’t touch that.”

It’s usually said with a half-joke and a grimace. It refers to the old box that “still works”, runs something important, and has survived so many fixes and workarounds that nobody feels confident changing it anymore.

That’s legacy debt. 

Not just “old tech”, but old tech that’s become a dependency. It’s the kind that quietly accumulates risk until it turns into downtime, security exposure, or an emergency upgrade at the worst possible time.

A legacy debt audit is the fast way to bring that risk back into the light. 

What Legacy Debt Really Looks Like

Legacy debt isn’t “old gear”. It’s old gear that has become normal. 

It’s the server that runs a critical app, the edge device nobody remembers buying, the workaround that turned into a dependency. Over time, that debt stacks up quietly.

Infinite Lambda describes legacy debt as something that “happens even to the best systems,” “silently accruing costs and constraints,” and it can “accumulate basically unnoticed until it is too costly to ignore.” 

That’s why a legacy debt audit isn’t a theoretical exercise. It’s a visibility exercise to bring the oldest, highest-leverage risks back onto the list of things you actively manage.

The security problem shows up when “old” becomes “unpatchable.” 

The UK’s NCSC guidance on obsolete products says, “Ideally, once out of date, technology should not be used,” and “the only fully effective way to mitigate this risk is to stop using the obsolete product.” 

If something can’t be updated, weaknesses don’t age out. They sit there, waiting for the wrong day.

Legacy debt also looks like basic server hygiene slipping.

NIST SP 800-123 frames secure server operations as an ongoing process: “Maintaining the secure configuration through application of appropriate patches and upgrades, security testing, monitoring of logs, and backups…” 

It also calls out foundational hardening steps like “Patch and upgrade the operating system” and “Remove or disable unnecessary services, applications, and network protocols.” 

When those basics become inconsistent, legacy debt turns into a reliability and incident-response problem, not just a security one.

Finally, legacy debt often hides at the edge. If you have end-of-support internet-facing devices, you’ve got high-leverage risk in the most exposed place. 

The 3 Oldest Risks to Find First

These three categories are where “old” most often turns into outsized risk, because they combine age with leverage: they either sit at the front door, can’t be fixed anymore, or have quietly drifted out of a safe baseline.

Risk #1: End-of-support edge devices

If you’re looking for high-leverage legacy debt, start at the edge. Firewalls, VPN gateways, routers, and other internet-facing devices are the front door to your environment. 

When they reach end-of-support (EOS), they don’t just become outdated. They become harder to defend because security fixes stop arriving.

What to check in your audit

  • List every edge device (firewall, VPN, router) and the support status for each one
  • Confirm which ones are internet-facing and which services are exposed
  • Identify devices that can’t run the current firmware or no longer receive updates.

Risk #2: Obsolete products that can’t be fixed anymore

Obsolete products are the purest form of legacy debt: things that are still operating but no longer receive security updates. That means every new vulnerability becomes permanent.

In other words, there’s no clever workaround that makes an unsupported system “safe”. There are only risk reductions until you can replace it.

What to check in your audit

  • Identify anything past support: server OS versions, appliances, old hypervisors, and line-of-business apps
  • Flag systems that require exceptions, like the ones with old protocols, weak auth, and special firewall rules
  • Find the “business-critical but unsupported” systems

Risk #3: “It still works” servers with neglected basics

This is the sneakiest risk because it looks normal. 

The server is supported. The hardware runs. Nobody’s complaining. But the basics have drifted: patching is inconsistent, unnecessary services are still running, and backups haven’t been proven under pressure.

SP 800-123 Guide to General Server Security frames secure server operations as an ongoing discipline, including “patches and upgrades,” “monitoring of logs,” and “backups.” 

It also calls out core hardening steps like “Patch and upgrade the operating system” and “Remove or disable unnecessary services, applications, and network protocols.” 

Those are the unglamorous fundamentals that stop small problems from turning into long outages.

What to check in your audit

  • Patch reality: what’s the current patch level and how often do updates slip?
  • Service sprawl: what’s running that doesn’t need to be running?
  • Admin and service accounts: where are the broad permissions and shared credentials?
  • Backup confidence: when was the last restore test and did it succeed?
  • Change control: who can make changes, and how are they tracked?

Stop Carrying Silent Risk

Legacy debt doesn’t announce itself. It sits quietly in the background until the day it becomes downtime, exposure, or an emergency upgrade you didn’t plan for.

A legacy debt audit gives you control back by turning “we should deal with that someday” into a shortlist you can act on. Start with the highest-leverage risks: end-of-support edge devices, obsolete products that can’t be patched, and servers where the basics have drifted. Then assign owners, set dates, and move one item at a time from “too scary to touch” to “handled”.

Contact us for help running your next legacy debt audit.

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This Article has been Republished with Permission from The Technology Press.