The Number of Brute-Force Attacks Remains the Same in Florida

The report doesn’t lie — the number of automated hacking attempts in Florida has remained the same in the course of the previous 14-day period. Statistics from Syspeace shows the number of brute-force attacks per server has remained unchanged. At the same time, there was a big decline of 23 percent overall in the whole USA.

The amount of attacks on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers remained unchanged throughout the last fortnight in Florida as 2,800 brute-force attacks per Windows servers were documented by Syspeace. In other words, the level of the brute-force attacks remained the same as the past two weeks. That means 40,000 total the sum total of automated hacking attempts in the Florida in the course of the previous 14-day period were blocked by Syspeace. In a single 14-day period in the state’s measured history, this is the 11th highest number of automated hacking attempts per Windows server secured by Syspeace.

By now, this year there have been 1,700 automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured server in the USA. Compared to the same period last year, the amount of automated hacking attempts has declined by 19 percent. That is to say, Syspeace blocked 810,000 brute-force attacks in the USA.

The evidence source is Windows servers secured by Syspeace globally. Syspeace is an intrusion-prevention software that provides affordable and easy-to-use tools for enterprises to fight automated hacking attempts. Syspeace wants to make the digital world safer for firms, one server at a time. Having collected and analyzed data on brute-force attacks since 2012, Syspeace is the world leader on the topic.

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 checks all possible passwords and passphrases to find the correct one.

To keep trouble out and block brute-force attacks, Syspeace offers software that safeguards firms from IT theft, combined with exceptional customer support.