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Tigran Tumanyan2020-12-07 10:30:04
Information Security
Tigran Tumanyan, 2020-12-07 10:30:04

Brute force RDP, is there any point in complaining about VPS hosting?

Good day.

There is a problem with brute-forcers (who doesn't? :-) ). Technically, it is closed on the router. The firewall "catches" them and sends them to the right place. Naturally "termites" do not give up, they change "session parameters" and so on. In general, they gnaw. The question is - is there an effective way, say, not in a technical plane, but rather in a legal one? Maybe there is a well-established complaint procedure (well, not in Sportloto, of course :-)), but in an abuse of VPS hosting? And if so, how do you get it right? In general - "where to start?".

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4 answer(s)
V
Vladimir Kuts, 2020-12-07
@fox_12

Do you have any significant losses from this?
If not, then I doubt that law enforcement agencies will take a long list of brute-forcers, track chains of requests around the world, submit requests, seize equipment and make an examination to prove guilt in each specific case, which in itself is a rather non-trivial task. It’s just that stupidly there won’t be enough resources, even if you motivate them well.
Therefore, just properly configure the firewall, set strong passwords, and regularly check your systems for vulnerabilities - and you will be happy.

D
Drno, 2020-12-07
@Drno

Windu, on the other hand, cannot be put naked on the Internet ...
As they wrote above - make secure access to RDP ...

R
Ruslan, 2020-12-10
@msHack

In legal NO
The first one is brute force from different countries, the laws are different everywhere
The second one is a lot of bruters and according to the laws of the Russian Federation, brute force is just an attempt to access and we have no articles for attempts

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