Severe Risk
IP 179.43.134.114 is a high-risk address associated with sustained hacking activity and IoT targeting, registered to Private Layer INC in Switzerland and flagged by automated honeypot sensors with a threat level of 10/10.
Analysis of community reports and detection data reveals 209 abuse reports filed against this address, with activity detected across 20 automated honeypot sensors over approximately two months spanning May to June 2026. The confidence score of 94% and activity frequency rating of 8/10 indicate persistent, purposeful behavior rather than incidental scanning. Operating from AS51852 (Private Layer INC), this Swiss infrastructure address has been flagged 19 times for general hacking activity encompassing intrusion attempts and exploitation attempts, alongside 1 report specifically documenting IoT targeting behavior. The concentration of reports across multiple independent sensor sources substantially reduces the likelihood of false positives.
The dominant hacking classification encompasses varied intrusion techniques including exploitation of vulnerabilities and unauthorized access attempts against exposed services. This activity poses concrete risk to any publicly accessible system, particularly those running outdated software or misconfigured network services. The single IoT-targeted report indicates this address has been used in campaigns specifically hunting poorly secured connected devices—smart cameras, routers, and similar equipment with weak or default security configurations. An address with a threat level of 10/10 actively engaged in both broad intrusion attempts and targeted IoT exploitation represents a dual-vector threat requiring immediate defensive action.
Site operators should block this IP at the network perimeter or firewall level given its confirmed malicious status. Implementing fail2ban or equivalent dynamic blocking tools provides automated response to repeated connection attempts. Organizations should ensure all exposed services run current patches and follow hardening best practices, with particular attention to IoT device segmentation, firmware updates, and credential management to limit exposure to the attack patterns observed from this source.