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And even with IPv4, botnets are a common attack source, so hitting from many endpoints isn't that hard. I'd say "well, it might catch the lowest effort attacks", but when SSH keys exist and solve many more problems in a much better way, it really does feel pointless. Maybe in an era where USB keys weren't so trivial, I'd buy the argument of "what if I need to access from another machine", but if you really worry about that, put your (password protected) keys on a USB stick and shove it in your wallet or on your keyring or whatever. (Are there security concerns there? Of course, but no more than typing your password in on some random machine.) |