possible hacking?
Ward Vandewege
ward at pong.be
Wed Jan 25 08:49:40 EST 2006
On Wed, Jan 25, 2006 at 08:36:07AM -0500, Rich Braun wrote:
> There are a variety of countermeasures you can install to prevent future
> attempts but the general rule is to disable all unnecessary applications. If
> you don't use sshd to get access from outside: install a firewall and block
> port 22. If you don't need to compile programs, deinstall gcc or render it
> inoperative.
Also; make /tmp a separate partition, and mount it noexec. Consider
chroot'ing particularly dangerous services, for instance Apache (dangerous
because users can install/run unsafe scripts, Apache's codebase itself is
quite good).
> I also have discovered there is more "security in obscurity" than many experts
> think. By moving sshd to a high-numbered port (instead of 22) I see no
> break-in attempts at all on my system--over a period of years--vs the
> more-typical several dozen per day if you leave port 22 visible.
Yes, same observation here. But this might only be a matter of time.
Ward.
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