Unprecedented Growth in Brute-Force Attacks in Tennessee, USA
The number of automated hacking attempts on Windows servers in Tennessee increased significantly in the previous 14 days. The brute-force attacks have grown by 740 percent throughout the 14 days prior, according to evidence from Windows servers secured by Syspeace. In the USA, that’s the biggest rise of brute-force attacks on Windows servers. At the same time, there was a big drop of 23 percent in the whole USA.
The sum total of attacks on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers escalated through the two weeks prior in Tennessee as 410 automated hacking attempts per Windows servers were logged by Syspeace. That means the automated hacking attempts escalated by 740 percent. Syspeace blocked 410 brute-force attacks in Tennessee.
For a comparison, automated hacking attempts in Nebraska and Nevada have risen. With 59 blocked automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured Windows Server the past two weeks, Nebraska has recorded a climb of 110 percent compared to the previous 14-day period. In Nevada, the amount has increased by 69 percent to 150 brute-force attacks per Syspeace-secured Windows Server.
All around the USA, automated hacking attempts on Windows servers secured by Syspeace have shown a big drop, but Tennessee sees the opposite. The automated hacking attempts on Windows servers secured by Syspeace have diminished by 23 percent in the USA in the course of the previous 14-day period. By now, this year there have been 1,700 brute-force attacks per Syspeace-secured server in the USA. The brute-force attacks have diminished by 19 percent on a year-to-year comparison. That is to say, the number of automated hacking attempts blocked by Syspeace in the USA was 810,000.
The statistics is collected by Syspeace, a company that helps fight automated hacking attempts. Syspeace saves enterprises time, effort, and money by blocking attacks that otherwise take many hours of repetitive, manual labor to discover and prevent. Syspeace tracks all the global Syspeace-secured Windows Servers conscientiously. The company is a global innovator on the topic since 2012, having collected and analyzed information on brute-force attacks.
During the brute-force attack, an attacker submits many different passwords and passphrases in the system, hoping to eventually get them right. The attacker systematically checks all possible passwords and passphrases to find the right one.
To keep trouble out and block automated hacking attempts, Syspeace offers software that safeguards businesses from IT theft, combined with outstanding customer support.