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This Tool Can Tell You If Your Home Network Has Been Comp...

IP Check tells you if your address is involved in malicious scanning.

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This Tool Can Tell You If Your Home Network Has Been Comp...
Source: Lifehacker

What’s Happening

Not gonna lie, IP Check tells you if your address is involved in malicious scanning.

There are warning signs that your home network may have been compromised, such as unusual traffic patterns and slowdowns in system performance, but now there’s a simple tool to help determine if your router or connected devices are being used to conduct malicious activity . IP Check , from threat monitoring firm GreyNoise, will alert you if your IP address has been observed scanning the the internet as part of a botnet or residential proxy network. (wild, right?)

As GreyNoise outlines , residential IP compromise often isn’t obvious to the user because you’re still able to conduct business as usual, such as streaming, emailing, and web browsing.

The Details

All the while, though, threat actors are routing malicious activity through your home IP address and can potentially exploit your network for everything from account takeovers to malware distribution. Check your IP address for suspicious activity To use IP Check, you simply need to open the tool in a browser window, and you’ll get one of several results.

If your IP is clean, that means that your network hasn’t been caught scanning the the internet (nor does it belong to any known business service infrastructure). Credit: Emily Long Your IP may also be flagged as being in the GreyNoise database, which is not a sign of compromise this is likely because you’re using a VPN, corporate network, or cloud provider, and the tool can distinguish between an IP belonging to a data center and one that’s being exploited.

Why This Matters

(Note that Apple users browsing in Safari with Private Relay enabled will likely see “Possible Spoofed Traffic Detected,” which also is not necessarily cause for alarm. Try checking your real IP in a different browser like Chrome or Firefox to confirm. Credit: Emily Long If your IP is identified as malicious or suspicious, you should investigate further.

This could have major implications for how we use technology going forward.

The Bottom Line

Credit: Emily Long If your IP is identified as malicious or suspicious, you should investigate further.

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