aws-gate
cowrie
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aws-gate | cowrie | |
---|---|---|
1 | 15 | |
443 | 4,909 | |
- | 1.7% | |
5.4 | 9.3 | |
6 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
aws-gate
cowrie
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Brute.Fail Watch brute force attacks in real time
Thanks for the reference; after some link chasing I was able to end up on the project I believe you're thinking of: https://github.com/cowrie/cowrie#features (appears to be BSD-3-Clause: https://github.com/cowrie/cowrie/blob/master/LICENSE.rst )
- Openssh username and password
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Potentially millions of Android TVs and phones come with malware preinstalled
Technically, yes, but it is quite difficult to perform a realistic emulation of an OS with shell facilities, as evidenced by all the system emulation on SSH honeypots e.g. cowrie[1].
[1] https://github.com/cowrie/cowrie/issues
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I'd like to build a database of the login/password associated with failed ssh attempts to my server and am trying to research the legality of this
In EU Law as long as you don't post full names you should be fine. There are honeypots for this purpose ready to deploy btw! Check out Cowrie. Best SSH honeypot I encountered so far.
- Cowrie SSH/Telnet Honeypot
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Server Hardening
Thanks for your opinion mate. I use Cowrie in connection with qemu aka my proxmox Here is the link 2 it: https://github.com/cowrie/cowrie
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[OC] Last 48 hours of honeypot data showing successful logins and attack map
Source is from data collected using Cowrie Honeypot The tool for displaying the data is Splunk
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Security research homelab, made with <3
It's currently a cowrie (https://github.com/cowrie/cowrie) with ssh and telnet. For my use case a low interaction in enough, maybe I'll code my own in the future.
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Honeypot server
I set up one of these a while back: https://github.com/cowrie/cowrie
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Geographical distribution of brute-force attacks on one of my servers during the first week of October – 88644 attempts from 739 sources.
Hey I’ve done some honeypot research if you’re wanting to explore that take a look at cowrie: https://github.com/cowrie/cowrie
What are some alternatives?
ssh-mitm - SSH man-in-the-middle tool
tpotce - 🍯 T-Pot - The All In One Honeypot Platform 🐝
aws-ssm-ec2-proxy-command - AWS SSM EC2 SSH Proxy Command
endlessh - SSH tarpit that slowly sends an endless banner
ssh-over-ssm - SSH over AWS SSM. No bastions or public-facing instances. SSH user management through IAM. No requirement to store SSH keys locally or on server.
opencanary - Modular and decentralised honeypot
gossm - 💻Interactive CLI tool that you can connect to ec2 using commands same as start-session, ssh in AWS SSM Session Manager
MISP - MISP (core software) - Open Source Threat Intelligence and Sharing Platform
alpine-ec2-ami - Packer builder and scripts to create an EC2 optimized Alpine Linux AMI
ssh-mitm - SSH-MITM - ssh audits made simple
amazon-ec2-auto-scaling-group-examples - This repository contains code samples, learning activities, and best-practices for scaling and elasticity with Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling groups.
django-honeypot - 🍯 Generic honeypot utilities for use in django projects.