Elevated Risk
IP address 178.16.54.237 is a high-risk address originating from the Netherlands and managed by Omegatech LTD under ASN AS202412, with a threat level of 7/10 and 378 total abuse reports indicating sustained malicious activity over a concentrated two-month window from April to June 2026.
The IP has been flagged by 20 automated honeypot sensors generating 378 reports with an activity frequency rating of 8/10, suggesting persistent and repeated offensive operations. The dominant threat categories are Email Spam (19 reports) and Hacking activity (15 reports), both indicating this address actively probes and abuses network resources. Suricata intrusion detection alerts logged against this IP reference stream protocol anomalies consistent with efforts to bypass or disrupt network security monitoring systems. The Netherlands-based network operator Omegatech LTD manages infrastructure that appears repeatedly leveraged for abusive purposes during this reporting period.
The primary risk from this address stems from SMTP-based abuse, where mass email distribution campaigns may deliver phishing payloads, malware, or unsolicited commercial content to targeted organizations. The hacking activity component suggests exploitation attempts and unauthorized access probes against exposed services. Combined with protocol-level anomalies detected in network traffic, this pattern indicates an actor capable of both volume-based abuse and targeted intrusion techniques. Organizations with publicly accessible mail servers or unpatched services face elevated exposure to this source.
To counter threats from this IP, implement SPF, DKIM, and DMARC email authentication alongside reputation-based filtering to block malicious messages. Blocking or rate-limiting traffic originating from AS202412 at the network perimeter reduces exposure to both email abuse and intrusion attempts. Regular security patching, intrusion detection monitoring, and authentication hardening on exposed services provide defense-in-depth against the observed attack patterns. Deploying tools such as fail2ban and maintaining current blocklists through continuous monitoring of abuse feeds helps organizations stay protected from this and similar threats.