Notable Threat
IP 64.62.156.172 is a high-risk address operated by Hurricane Electric (AS6939) that has generated 599 abuse reports with an 8/10 threat level, indicating sustained hacking activity including targeted exploitation attempts against IoT infrastructure originating from the United States. Automated honeypot sensors across 20 distinct detection points flagged this IP with an 82% confidence score between September 2025 and June 2026, making it one of the most consistently reported addresses in recent community telemetry for this network segment.
The volume of reports and the 8/10 activity frequency score reveal a persistent, high-intensity threat actor rather than opportunistic scanning. The IP is allocated to Hurricane Electric, a major US backbone provider whose ASN frequently hosts both exit nodes for legitimate traffic and abused infrastructure due to its scale. The dominant threat category is hacking activity, specifically intrusion attempts and exploitation probes, supplemented by at least one confirmed IoT-targeted connection. Attack pattern analysis detected Suricata alerts referencing invalid TLS record types, a technique sometimes used to fingerprint or probe secured services for weaknesses.
Hacking activity on this scale poses concrete risks: it suggests the actor is systematically scanning for vulnerabilities, attempting unauthorized access, or probing IoT devices for known weaknesses such as default credentials or unpatched firmware. The TLS anomaly indicates the IP may be testing encrypted service resilience or attempting protocol-level manipulation. For any exposed service, particularly IoT deployments or weakly hardened servers, these techniques can precede credential compromise or firmware exploitation.
Site operators should block or rate-limit this IP at the firewall level and monitor logs for correlated activity. Implementing fail2ban or similar dynamic blocking tools can automate this response. Network segmentation isolating IoT devices from critical infrastructure is strongly advised, along with enforcing strong unique credentials and disabling unused services. Regular patching and intrusion detection monitoring will further reduce exposure to the techniques this address has demonstrated.