Significant Threat
IP 71.6.199.23 is a high-risk threat actor with a threat level of 8/10 that has been linked to sustained hacking activity and IoT-targeted intrusion attempts, accumulating 234 abuse reports across 20 automated honeypot sensors since August 2025. The address demonstrates persistent offensive behavior with an activity frequency rating of 8/10, placing it firmly in the category of confirmed malicious actors requiring immediate defensive attention from network operators.
The IP originates from a United States network operated by CARINET under autonomous system AS10439. Detection data reveals substantial malicious activity, with 234 total reports logged across automated honeypot infrastructure over a nine-month observation window from August 2025 through May 2026. Report composition shows 19 instances classified as general hacking activity involving intrusion attempts and exploitation of vulnerabilities, alongside 1 report specifically tagged for IoT-targeted attacks. The presence of both categories within recent reporting indicates a dual-purpose threat methodology combining opportunistic network probing with targeted device exploitation.
Hacking activity encompasses unauthorized intrusion attempts, vulnerability scanning, and exploitation of misconfigured services commonly found on exposed network endpoints. IoT-targeted patterns suggest this actor additionally probes for weak or default credentials and unpatched firmware in connected devices such as routers, cameras, and smart appliances. The convergence of these techniques amplifies real-world risk, as successful exploitation can provide persistent access, pivot points for lateral movement, or entry into larger enterprise networks through compromised IoT endpoints.
Site operators should implement firewall rules or network ACLs to block or rate-limit connections from this address, particularly on services exposed to the internet. Deploying automated abuse-response tools such as fail2ban can detect and neutralize repeated connection attempts in real time. All internet-facing services and IoT devices should be kept current with security patches, and connected devices should be isolated on segmented network zones to constrain potential lateral movement. Monitoring for this IP in inbound logs remains advisable even after blocking measures are enacted.