France Witnesses No Significant Change in Automated Hacking Attempts

In the past two weeks, the number of automated hacking attempts in France remained unchanged compared to the last fortnight. Statistics from Syspeace shows the amount of brute-force attacks per server has remained the same. At the same time, there was a slight drop of 17 percent overall in the whole world.

In France, the sum total of attacks on Windows servers secured by Syspeace remained the same through the last fortnight as 1,300 brute-force attacks per Windows servers were documented by Syspeace. Simply put, the level of the automated hacking attempts remained the same as the previous 14 days. The number of brute-force attacks blocked by Syspeace in France was 27,000.

Up until now, this year there have been 1,500 brute-force attacks per Windows server secured by Syspeace in the world. The automated hacking attempts have grown by 8.7 percent on a year-to-year comparison. That means the number of automated hacking attempts in the world that were blocked by Syspeace was 1,300,000.

The evidence source is Syspeace, a company that helps fight automated hacking attempts. Syspeace saves firms time, effort, and money by blocking attacks that otherwise take many hours of repetitive, manual labor to find and prevent. Syspeace monitors all the global Syspeace-secured Windows Servers thoroughly. The company is a global innovator on the topic since 2012, having collected and analyzed statistics on automated hacking attempts.

An automated hacking attempt consists of an attacker submitting many passwords or passphrases with the hope of in the end guessing them. The attacker systematically checks all possible passwords and passphrases and tries to find the right one.

To keep problems out and block automated hacking attempts, Syspeace offers software that shields enterprises from IT theft, combined with excellent customer support.