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52.146.21.82 has a threat confidence score of 85%. This IP address from United States (AS8075, Microsoft Corporation) has been observed in 154 honeypot sessions targeting HTTPS, HTTP, SMB, SSH, IMAP and 11 other protocols. First observed on January 24, 2026, most recently active March 27, 2026.
Client sends RTSP OPTIONS requests to check supported methods and confirm that an RTSP service is exposed, then disconnects without attempting authentication or stream setup. This pattern is typically associated with automated reconnaissance or internet-wide scanning rather than active stream access.
Redis session where the client presents the MGLNDD-prefixed identifier (for example MGLNDD_[ip]_6379) within the connection metadata, indicating activity from a specific automated Redis scanning framework. The behavior is triggered by the previously defined primitive detecting this exact tag pattern and groups sessions attributed to that tooling. The behavior reflects identifiable automated access rather than standard Redis client usage and does not assume additional commands beyond the observable identifier.
Identifies HTTP requests targeting the web server root path ("/"), typically used for initial service discovery, host validation, or baseline content inspection prior to deeper enumeration.
FTP session where the client issues AUTH TLS to upgrade the connection to Transport Layer Security. This reflects protocol-level encryption negotiation prior to further interaction.
Identifies HTTPS requests targeting the web server root path ("/"), typically used for initial service discovery, host validation, or baseline content inspection prior to deeper enumeration
Identifies HTTP GET requests directly targeting the /bad-request path, indicating automated or manual probing of application error-handling routes rather than legitimate navigation flow.
Identifies execution of the Redis INFO command (case-insensitive), which retrieves server configuration, version, memory usage, and runtime statistics. This behavior reflects service interrogation and environment fingerprinting activity. While INFO can be used legitimately by administrators, it is also commonly observed during automated scanning and pre-exploitation reconnaissance of exposed Redis instances.