Third Biggest Growth of Automated Hacking Attempts in the world in Spain
Throughout the previous 14-day period, the number of automated hacking attempts in Spain built up compared to the last fortnight. According to statistics from Windows servers secured by Syspeace, there was an increase of 54 percent in automated hacking attempts per server. That’s the third greatest growth of automated hacking attempts on Windows servers in the world. Overall, in the world, there was an escalation of 33 percent.
In Spain, the amount of attacks on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers built up in the previous 14 days as 270 brute-force attacks per Windows servers were logged by Syspeace. In other words, the brute-force attacks went up by 54 percent. That means 4,000 total the number of automated hacking attempts in the Spain during the previous 14 days were blocked by Syspeace.
There has been, by way of comparison, a climb of the sum total of brute-force attacks in Colombia and Brazil. With 1,500 blocked automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured Windows Server the two weeks prior, Colombia has seen a growth of 57 percent in comparison with the last fortnight. In Brazil, the number has climbed up by 50 percent to 120 automated hacking attempts per Windows server secured by Syspeace.
All around the world, automated hacking attempts on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers have shown an escalation, so Spain is not alone with the problem. In the last weeks there have been 33 percent more brute-force attacks than through the past two weeks in the world. By now, this year there have been 960 automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured server in the world. The automated hacking attempts have grown by 43 percent on a year-to-year comparison. That means the amount of automated hacking attempts in the world that were blocked by Syspeace was 670,000.
The evidence originates from Syspeace-secured Windows Servers globally. Syspeace is an intrusion-prevention software that provides affordable and easy-to-use tools for companies to fight brute-force attacks. Syspeace wants to make the digital world safer for firms, one server at a time. Having collected and analyzed data on automated hacking attempts since 2012, Syspeace is the world leader on the topic.
During the brute-force attack, an attacker submits many passwords or passphrases, hoping to finally get them right. Each and every possible password and passphrase is systematically checked to find the correct one.
To keep problems out and block brute-force attacks, Syspeace offers software that safeguards enterprises from IT theft, combined with exceptional customer support.