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tutfbhuf | 1 year ago
For a company, this should definitely not be something to worry about. However, if I were able to single out individual IPs that are attacking me, then I would simply block them, report them (use the abuse form from the hoster of the attacking IP), and call it a day. This way, you can at least hope that the hoster will do something about it, either by kicking the hacker off its platform or, if it is some kind of service reflection attack, inform the victim to close the security loophole on their server and remove themselves from the botnet. If your attacks originate from a vast amount of different IPs from Russia and China, consider geoblocking.
tamrix|1 year ago
Cgnat is becoming common on home internet. You can share an IP with up to 128 other people.
tutfbhuf|1 year ago
supriyo-biswas|1 year ago