Stop Brute Force: 5 Immediate Steps to Block SSH Hacking

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Stop Brute Force: 5 Immediate Steps to Block SSH Hacking is a strategic cybersecurity playbook designed to secure Linux servers from automated password-guessing attacks.

Here are the five immediate, actionable steps to secure your Secure Shell (SSH) access. πŸ› οΈ 1. Change the Default SSH Port

Most automated bots target the default SSH Port 22. Changing this port immediately stops the vast majority of automated scanning scripts. Action: Open /etc/ssh/sshd_config.

Change: Find #Port 22 and change it to a random high port (e.g., Port 2244).

Result: Hackers must port-scan your server before attempting a brute-force attack. πŸ”‘ 2. Disable Password Authentication

Passwords are vulnerable to dictionary attacks. Switching to SSH keys makes brute-forcing mathematically impossible.

Action: Generate an SSH key pair (ssh-keygen) and copy it to your server.

Change: In /etc/ssh/sshd_config, set PasswordAuthentication no.

Result: The server will reject all traditional password login attempts. 🚫 3. Ban Root Logins

The root username exists on every Linux system. Attackers always target this username first because it grants absolute control.

Action: Create a new, limited user account with sudo privileges. Change: In /etc/ssh/sshd_config, set PermitRootLogin no.

Result: Attackers cannot guess passwords for a root account that is blocked from logging in. πŸ›‘οΈ 4. Install Fail2ban

Fail2ban is an intrusion prevention software that monitors server logs for malicious activity and automatically blocks offenders.

Action: Install the package (sudo apt install fail2ban or sudo dnf install fail2ban). Configure: Set a rule to monitor SSH logs.

Result: If an IP address fails to log in 3 to 5 times, Fail2ban dynamically blocks that IP using the server’s firewall. πŸ—ΊοΈ 5. Restrict Access via Firewall or AllowList

The most secure server is one that only talks to trusted networks. You can restrict SSH access to specific IP addresses.

Action: Use a firewall tool like UFW, firewalld, or cloud security groups.

Change: In /etc/ssh/sshd_config, add AllowUsers yourusername@your_static_ip.

Result: Even if someone steals your login credentials, they cannot log in from an unauthorized physical location. To help apply these changes safely, could you share: Your Linux distribution (Ubuntu, CentOS, Debian)? If you have a static IP address? Whether you currently use SSH keys?

I can provide the exact terminal commands for your specific setup.

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