Notable Threat
IP 92.63.197.77 is a high-risk address originating from Ukraine and operated by FOP Dmytro Nedilskyi (ASN AS211736) that has been extensively linked to reconnaissance activity, primarily port-scanning operations targeting network infrastructure. With 635 total abuse reports and a threat level of 8/10, this IP represents a significant risk despite a relatively modest activity frequency rating of 2/10, indicating periodic rather than continuous offensive behaviour.
Analysis of the available intelligence reveals that the hostile activity was first documented in March 2026 and continued through May 2026, with all 20 recent reports specifically categorizing the threat as port-scan behaviour. The high confidence score of 89% reflects the consistent pattern of automated honeypot detections across multiple sensors, suggesting this is not isolated or accidental traffic but rather deliberate, repeated reconnaissance conducted against exposed network endpoints.
Port scanning represents the initial phase of a targeted attack, where an adversary systematically probes a victim's network to identify accessible services, operating systems, and potential vulnerabilities that can be exploited in subsequent stages. The Cisco ASA probing pattern noted in the sanitized attack-pattern data indicates this IP has specifically targeted firewall and security appliance configurations, which are critical infrastructure components. For organizations with directly accessible network resources, such reconnaissance significantly narrows the window between initial compromise and full system breach.
Network defenders should implement immediate blocks at the firewall level for IP 92.63.197.77 while ensuring such blocks are part of a broader deny-by-default security posture. Deploying or strengthening rate-limiting and brute-force protection mechanisms on exposed services helps mitigate automated reconnaissance. Continuous monitoring for scanning patterns combined with service minimization, closing unused ports and protocols, reduces the available attack surface. Organizations should also consider automated blocking tools such as fail2ban to proactively defend against repeat reconnaissance activity from this source.