• Krafting@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    “Vodafone” is the ISP owning the IP address of the user who tried to loggin. So i’ts someone who is using vodafone as his ISP.

  • bcovertigo@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Low effort speculation:

    That’s a vodaphone portugal IP, but this is likely traffic routing though their customer cellular network and not their corporate. It’s possible that someone in PT has a similar username for this service and is fat fingering it. It’s also possible that you’re seeing a tiny sliver of a larger attack.

    Spur.us tracks that IP as an egress point for openproxy and windscribe ResIP networks so it’s worth considering that the origin of the authentications you’re seeing may not be Portuguese cellphone but someone hiding behind those services.

    Here’s a paper describing the difficulties such a service creates for folks trying to secure accounts with traditional IP reputation based rules. “Resident Evil: Understanding Residential IP Proxy as a Dark Service” https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8835239

    Shooting in the dark for how a bad actor would monetize account takeover for this service if this is in fact an attack… They could try to sell your invitation to that private tracker. They could also look to scoop up a bunch of folks to try and blackmail based on what victims are download/seeding. Other more creative options I’m not thinking of might be on the table.

  • taanegl@beehaw.org
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    8 months ago

    I don’t think that’s Vodafone directly. Vodafone is a mobile provider and is therefore also an ISP.

    Someone who uses Vodafone tried to log in, wether it was manual or automated. At least that’s my surmise.

    This is a good time to remind people to use 2FA and possibly even WebAuth (or WebKey) if possible.