In there you are almost telling people that security through obscurity is a 
good way. 
That might sometimes be true but in this case it could mean that you would be 
handing passwords and other data out. 

When you start SSH on port 22 it is done with root privileges because the root 
user is the only one that can use ports below 1024. Root is the only user that 
can listen to that port or do something with it. If you move the port to 2222 
for example you move SSH to a port that can be used with out a privileged user. 
This would mean I could write a script that listens to port 2222 and mimics SSH 
to capture the passwords. Changing the port of SSH to 2222 or anything above 
1024 makes SSH less secure. Pretty ironic that this is in the "Securing SSH" 
chapter.  This should never be done. 

Location: 
http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/Network/SecuringSSH#head-3579222198adaf43a3ecbdc438ebce74da40d8ec
username: TheodorAndresson

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