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by LinuxBender
1731 days ago
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Changing the port is obfuscation and by itself would not enhance security, however it does preclude all the noise from the automated bots. This allows you to have better alerting on brute force attempts because all of those attempts are a human manually targeting your server. The end result is effectively a better security posture. I have servers sprinkled all over the internet and in the last 30 years or so bots have never tickled my ssh daemon. |
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Active alerting on brute force attempts on an internet-facing SSH service is an exercise in human suffering. At best you don’t get any alerts, and at worst you get alerts that you do… what, precisely, with? Block the IP? Look up the “human” attacker and send them an email asking them to stop?
There are environments and entities for whom pattern detection on incoming connections makes sense, and those environments aren’t running internet-facing SSH.