Extreme Threat
IP 207.46.224.85 is a high-risk address associated with SSH brute-force intrusion attempts, registered to Microsoft's AS8075 autonomous system and originating from Singapore, with automated honeypot sensors reporting 1045 total incidents over a two-month period ending January 2026.
The data reveals a significant but somewhat contradictory profile: while the threat level registers at maximum severity and the report volume of 1045 is substantial, the activity frequency score of 0/10 indicates no detected activity in the recent measurement window, and the confidence score of 60 percent suggests moderate certainty in the classification. The IP is owned and operated by Microsoft-Corp-MSN-AS-Block within AS8075, a major cloud infrastructure provider, which raises the possibility that this address may be allocated to a Singapore-based Azure data center and subsequently abused by threat actors for scanning and credential-attack campaigns. Automated honeypot sensors, numbering at least 20 distinct sources, have attributed recent reports primarily to general hacking activity and specifically to SSH brute-force attempts.
SSH brute-force attacks represent a persistent and automated threat where adversaries systematically attempt to guess server credentials by cycling through common username-password combinations against exposed Secure Shell services. The concrete risk to an organization with an unprotected SSH port facing the internet is unauthorized server access, privilege escalation, and potential deployment of persistent backdoors or malware, often leading to data exfiltration or incorporation into botnet infrastructure. The volume of reports associated with this address indicates it has been actively used in such campaigns targeting internet-facing systems.
Organizations should immediately block or restrict access to IP 207.46.224.85 at the network perimeter firewall level, implement key-based authentication for all SSH access while disabling password authentication entirely, and deploy automated threat-response tools such as fail2ban to dynamically ban IPs exhibiting brute-force patterns. Additionally, changing the default SSH listening port, disabling root login, and enforcing strong passphrase policies will substantially reduce vulnerability to the attack pattern observed from this address.