Turkey Sees 8.3 Percent Increase in Automated Hacking Attempts

In Turkey, the amount of automated hacking attempts on Windows servers grew slightly throughout the past two weeks in comparison with the previous 14 days. According to data from Windows servers secured by Syspeace, there was a climb of 8.3 percent in automated hacking attempts per server. In contrast, there was a slight decline of 19 percent in the whole world.

Syspeace registered 2,500 automated hacking attempts per Windows servers in Turkey during the 14 days prior. That means the brute-force attacks increased by 8.3 percent. That means 4,600 total the amount of brute-force attacks in the Turkey during the last fortnight were blocked by Syspeace. In the country’s measured history, this is the 3rd highest number of attempted brute-force attacks per Windows server secured by Syspeace for a single 14-day period.

There has been, for a comparison, an escalation of the amount of brute-force attacks in Sweden and Hungary. With 1,300 blocked automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured Windows Server the previous 14 days, Sweden has witnessed a growth of 24 percent compared to the two weeks prior. In Hungary, the sum total has gone up by 6.7 percent to 700 brute-force attacks per Syspeace-secured Windows Server.

The attacks on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers have shown a slight contraction all around the world. In other words, Turkey is going against the flow. During the last weeks, there have been 19 percent less automated hacking attempts than throughout the 14 days prior in the world. So far, this year there have been 1,400 brute-force attacks per Syspeace-secured Windows Server in the world. The brute-force attacks have shot up by 14 percent on a year-to-year comparison. Simply put, Syspeace blocked 1,200,000 brute-force attacks in the world.

The evidence is released from Syspeace, a service provider that fights automated hacking attempts. Syspeace wants to make the digital world safer for enterprises, one server at a time. Having collected and analyzed evidence on automated hacking attempts since 2012, Syspeace is a global trailblazer on the topic. The company believes that cyber security management doesn’t have to be complicated and expensive.

During the automated hacking attempt, an attacker submits many different passwords and passphrases in the system, hoping to eventually get them right. The attacker systematically inspects all possible passwords and passphrases to find the right one.

To avoid trouble and block automated hacking attempts, Syspeace offers software that shields companies from IT theft, combined with outstanding customer support.