Notable Threat
IP 94.100.132.100 is a high-risk address linked to 354 abuse reports dominated by email spam activity, representing a significant IP reputation threat originating from German network infrastructure operated by MK Netzdienste GmbH & Co. KG. With a threat level of 7 out of 10 and an activity frequency rated 8 out of 10, this IP has demonstrated sustained, aggressive behavior over approximately 11 months of observed reporting.
The IP was first reported in August 2025 and most recently reported in June 2026, accumulating 354 total reports across 20 automated honeypot sensors with a 78% confidence score. Detection logs attributed to this address reveal systematic mail abuse patterns including forged sender address activity, recipient harvesting attempts, and general postfix spam violations. The volume of violations—particularly 21 enhanced postfix violations and 20 standard postfix violations linked to mail abuse—indicates this is not opportunistic scanning but rather persistent exploitation of exposed email services.
Email spam infrastructure poses concrete risks beyond mere nuisance. Addresses involved in spam distribution frequently serve as vectors for phishing campaigns, malware delivery, and credential harvesting. The forged sender address pattern observed suggests this IP participates in email spoofing operations that can damage the reputation of legitimate domains and trigger blocklisting by major mail providers. For organizations running exposed SMTP services, interaction with such an IP can result in downstream email deliverability issues, increased infrastructure load, and potential compromise of end-user trust.
Site operators should implement strict inbound mail validation using SPF, DKIM, and DMARC protocols to reject forged sender traffic. Deploying reputable email filtering services and monitoring for sustained connection attempts from this address can reduce exposure. Where appropriate, implementing connection-level blocking or rate-limiting based on honeypot threat intelligence feeds provides an additional defensive layer. Regular review of mail server logs for patterns consistent with recipient harvesting—unusually high volumes of RCPT TO commands from single sources—can help identify and neutralize similar threats proactively.