Elevated Risk
IP 88.210.63.5 is a high-risk address operating from Ukraine that has generated 1,229 abuse reports over approximately three months, with a threat level of 8/10 and a confidence score of 91%, indicating a highly active reconnaissance operation primarily targeting exposed network infrastructure through systematic port-scanning activity.
The address, registered to network operator FOP Dmytro Nedilskyi under autonomous system AS211736, was first reported in March 2026 and most recently in June 2026, representing sustained hostile activity over a compressed timeframe. All 20 recent threat-category reports specifically classify the activity as port-scanning behavior, with an activity frequency rating of 8/10 suggesting near-continuous operation. Detection originated exclusively from automated honeypot sensors, which identified probes consistent with CiscoASA firewall reconnaissance patterns. The volume of total reports, combined with the consistently high activity frequency score, indicates this is not an isolated incident but rather sustained, methodical reconnaissance infrastructure.
Port scanning represents the initial reconnaissance phase of most targeted attacks, where threat actors systematically identify open services, outdated protocols, and misconfigured devices before launching exploitation attempts. The CiscoASA-specific scanning pattern detected suggests the operator is specifically hunting for exposed Cisco security appliances, which are common enterprise perimeter devices. An address with this level of report density and scanning persistence indicates either an active threat actor conducting pre-exploitation surveying or a compromised host being used as a scanning proxy. The 91% confidence score reflects strong corroboration across multiple detection sensors, leaving little ambiguity about the malicious intent behind this traffic.
Site operators should immediately block IP 88.210.63.5 at the network perimeter firewall and implement geolocation-based restrictions if Ukrainian origin traffic is not expected. Deploying fail2ban or equivalent dynamic firewall rules can automatically block repeated scanning behavior patterns. Organizations running CiscoASA appliances should verify they are not exposed to the public internet and should enforce strict access control lists limiting management interfaces to authorized IP ranges. Continuous monitoring for scanning patterns and implementing intrusion detection signatures for CiscoASA reconnaissance probes will provide additional detection capability against similar future activity.