Dylan Semler wrote:
> Here's something that I've always been curious about. I assume that the
dangers of allowing root log-in are:
1. It's a user name that every linux system (except ubuntu) has, so all
a hacker needs is the correct password in order to gain access, rather
than the correct user name and password.
2. Once access is gained, there are no restrictions on what the user
can do, as they are root.
However, if you use an 8-digit password with capital and lowercase
letters, numbers, and symbols, there are 8^( 26*2 + 10*2 + 20 ) = 8^92 =
1.21e83 possible passwords. Since ssh waits about a second after each
incorrect password and there have been only 3.32e17 seconds in the
history of the universe, it seems scritcly /impossible/ for a password
to be guessed. So the risk must not be from password-bots. What is the
risk then?
This was my question as well, but I want to up this a bit. I actually disallowed password authentication over SSH. I only allow root and only with a
correct key. Obviously someone could steal my key. But the key is password protected, so they would have to steal my password too. Now, at this stage
actually creating a separate account on my box, an account I will never use for anything except to do su - seems ridiculous. Mind you that I do not do
anything on my servers that doesn't require root privileges.
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