Severe Risk
IP 86.54.42.199, registered to Global-Data System IT Corporation in Seychelles under ASN AS42624, is a critical-risk address with the highest possible threat level of 10/10. This assessment carries 94% confidence based on 293 total abuse reports, with automated honeypot sensors flagging the IP across 20 distinct detection points during January 2026. The dominant attack pattern involves SSH brute-force attempts to gain unauthorized server access, indicating deliberate, high-volume intrusion activity targeting exposed SSH services globally.
The volume and consistency of reports for this address are significant. A threat frequency score of 8/10 demonstrates sustained, repeated malicious behavior rather than incidental scanning. The concentration of activity within a single month and the specificity of the attack vector (SSH authentication abuse) suggest a persistent automated campaign. The detection by numerous independent honeypot sensors confirms that this activity is not isolated or transient, and the 293 total reports represent a substantial abuse history that places any exposed SSH service at immediate risk of compromise.
SSH brute-force attacks remain one of the most common pathways for unauthorized server access, exploiting weak or predictable credentials to gain entry. Attackers use automated tools to cycle through authentication attempts rapidly, and successful compromise grants attackers command execution capabilities, potential data theft, or use of the compromised system for further malicious activity. The pattern documented for this IP aligns with a coordinated credential-guessing campaign that threatens any internet-facing SSH daemon with default, weak, or brute-force susceptible passwords.
Site operators should immediately block or rate-limit this IP at the firewall level and monitor for any connections matching this source address. Hardening SSH configurations is critical: enforce key-based authentication, disable root login over SSH, change the default listening port, and implement fail2ban or equivalent tools to automatically ban addresses exhibiting brute-force behavior. Regular audits of user credentials and real-time monitoring of authentication logs will further reduce exposure to credential-guessing campaigns of this nature.