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87.236.176.169 has a threat confidence score of 90%. This IP address from United Kingdom (AS211298, Driftnet Ltd) has been observed in 377 honeypot sessions targeting HTTPS, MSSQL, POSTGRES, SMTP, SIP and 11 other protocols. First observed on January 21, 2026, most recently active March 22, 2026.
Client performs MongoDB service validation by issuing an initial hello handshake command followed by execution of the buildInfo command against the admin database to retrieve detailed server version and build metadata. This sequence reflects structured deployment fingerprinting and reconnaissance activity commonly associated with automated scanning tools, vulnerability assessment frameworks, or pre-exploitation workflows used to confirm service exposure and identify version-specific attack opportunities.
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.
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
FTP session where the client issues HELP, SYST, and FEAT commands to query supported commands, system type, and server capabilities before terminating the session.
Automated SMTP interaction performing a minimal capability check by issuing EHLO followed by a STARTTLS upgrade request and immediately terminating the session. This pattern is commonly associated with internet-wide scanners, security research crawlers, or opportunistic bots verifying whether an SMTP service supports encrypted communication. The absence of authentication attempts or message submission indicates reconnaissance or service fingerprinting rather than active abuse.
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.