Significant Threat
IP 64.62.197.17 is a high-risk address assessed at 8/10 threat level with an 87% confidence rating, operating from a Hurricane Electric network (AS6939) in the United States and exhibiting sustained hacking activity alongside targeted probes against Internet of Things infrastructure.
Analysis of community reports and automated honeypot sensors reveals 406 total abuse reports attributed to this address across a ten-month observation window from August 2025 through June 2026, with an activity frequency rated 8/10. The detection footprint spans 20 distinct automated honeypot sensors, indicating broad reconnaissance and attack propagation across multiple monitored environments. The dominant threat classification is general hacking activity (19 recent reports), with a smaller subset of reports flagging IoT and ICS-targeted behavior (1 recent report). The attack-pattern metadata confirms connection-based intrusion attempts and deliberate targeting of IoT or industrial control systems, suggesting this actor maintains both generic exploitation tooling and specialized resources for compromising connected devices.
The concentration of hacking activity against this IP reflects automated scanning and exploitation attempts against publicly accessible services, a pervasive threat vector where adversaries probe for unpatched vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, or weak authentication. The IoT targeting dimension elevates the risk profile considerably, as Internet of Things and industrial control systems frequently operate with default credentials, outdated firmware, and limited security monitoring. An address exhibiting this dual threat pattern likely participates in botnet recruitment, credential harvesting campaigns, or pre-positioning for larger-scale infrastructure compromises.
Network defenders should immediately block or rate-limit traffic from this address at the firewall or intrusion-prevention layer, particularly on services exposed to the public internet. Implementing strong authentication requirements—enforcing complex passwords, disabling root/admin default accounts, and enabling multi-factor authentication—substantially reduces the attack surface for both general intrusion and IoT compromise. Isolating IoT and ICS devices on dedicated network segments with strict access controls limits lateral movement if initial access is achieved. Security teams should also deploy monitoring rules and consider defensive tools such as fail2ban to dynamically block repeated connection attempts from abusive sources.