Severe Risk
IP 5.78.58.246 is a critical-risk address that has generated 846 abuse reports from automated honeypot sensors, with the majority of recent activity categorized as general hacking intrusion attempts and SSH brute-force login attempts targeting exposed server management interfaces. With a threat level of 10 out of 10 and a confidence score of 79 percent, this IP represents a significant and active risk to any publicly accessible SSH service on the internet.
The detection data shows that 20 distinct automated honeypot sensors across the network flagged this address between December 2025, with 13 reports specifically documenting general hacking activity and 7 reports identifying SSH-specific attack patterns. Despite the enormous volume of reports, the activity frequency metric registered at 0 out of 10, suggesting the hostile traffic may be concentrated in short, high-intensity bursts rather than sustained persistent scanning. The IP traces to Hetzner Online GmbH operating autonomous system AS212317, a major European cloud infrastructure provider whose IP space is frequently abused for automated attack campaigns due to the scale and relative anonymity of their cloud services.
SSH brute-force attacks work by systematically attempting thousands of common username and password combinations against exposed SSH daemons until valid credentials are discovered. A successful compromise grants the attacker direct command-line access to the target system, effectively surrendering full control of the server. General hacking activity detected from this address compounds the risk, indicating the host is also running broader vulnerability probing and intrusion attempt tooling beyond credential stuffing. The sheer volume of reports confirms this is not random or opportunistic scanning but rather deliberate, coordinated hostile activity being executed at scale against internet-facing services.
Site operators should immediately block IP 5.78.58.246 at the firewall or network edge to eliminate all inbound connections. SSH services should be hardened by disabling password-based authentication in favor of cryptographic key pairs, moving the default port 22 to a non-standard port, and disabling direct root login. Implementing automated threat-response tools such as fail2ban or similar intrusion prevention systems can dynamically ban repeated offending addresses. Finally, maintain rigorous patch management and monitor authentication logs for any signs of successful compromise or lateral movement.