Critical Alert
IP 196.251.84.253 is a high-risk address originating from the Netherlands, operated through AS401120 (CHEAPY-HOST), that has been definitively linked to web application attacks with a maximum threat score of 10/10. The IP has accumulated 647 total abuse reports from automated honeypot sensors, with recent activity concentrated in August and September 2025. Despite the low activity frequency rating of 0/10, the volume of historical reports and the critical threat level indicate persistent scanning and probing behaviour targeting web application vulnerabilities.
Analysis of the 647 reported incidents reveals that all 20 of the most recent reports consistently cite web application attack patterns detected by honeypot sensors. The IP operates from a Netherlands-based network associated with CHEAPY-HOST, a provider commonly utilized for transient hosting infrastructure. With a confidence score of 59%, the detection systems have established a reliable pattern linking this address to automated exploitation attempts against web-facing applications. The two-month reporting window between August and September 2025 demonstrates sustained malicious intent rather than isolated scanning activity.
Web application attacks encompass a broad category of exploitation techniques targeting software vulnerabilities such as cross-site scripting, SQL injection, local file inclusion, and other OWASP Top 10 weaknesses. The consistent targeting of web applications suggests the operator is systematically scanning the internet for misconfigured or unpatched web servers to compromise. For organizations running exposed web services, such probing represents a concrete risk of data breach, service disruption, or complete server compromise depending on the vulnerabilities present.
Defensive measures should include immediate blocking of this IP address at the network perimeter firewall or through intrusion prevention systems. Deploying a web application firewall with updated rule sets would provide protection against the specific attack patterns observed. Organizations should ensure all web applications are running current patches and conduct security audits to identify and remediate OWASP Top 10 vulnerabilities before exploitation. Implementing fail2ban or similar log-based blocking tools can provide automated response to repeated probing from this and similar addresses.