Port Details - Port 7212

Aug 03 13 Aug 04 12 Aug 05 14 Aug 06 16 Aug 07 12 Aug 08 9 Aug 09 15 Aug 10 17 Aug 11 15 Aug 12 17 Aug 13 12 Aug 14 11 Aug 15 11 Aug 16 12 Aug 17 15 Aug 18 15 Aug 19 10 Aug 20 7 Aug 21 12 Aug 22 14 Aug 23 14 Aug 24 11 Aug 25 11 Aug 26 14 Aug 27 10 Aug 28 14 Aug 29 16 Aug 30 15 Aug 31 15 Sep 01 13 Sep 02 5 Aug 03 4,322 Aug 04 3,882 Aug 05 4,017 Aug 06 4,115 Aug 07 3,323 Aug 08 4,193 Aug 09 2,297 Aug 10 2,351 Aug 11 2,671 Aug 12 4,466 Aug 13 3,498 Aug 14 3,187 Aug 15 4,666 Aug 16 3,740 Aug 17 2,099 Aug 18 2,850 Aug 19 1,804 Aug 20 2,650 Aug 21 4,099 Aug 22 3,335 Aug 23 4,311 Aug 24 3,753 Aug 25 4,515 Aug 26 5,512 Aug 27 3,852 Aug 28 4,689 Aug 29 4,555 Aug 30 2,646 Aug 31 4,605 Sep 01 4,055 Sep 02 2,958
[show ascii data]
  • Start Date:
  • End Date:
  • Port:
  • Left Graph:
  • Right Graph:
  • Show Range:Yes No

Port Information

ProtocolServiceName
[get complete service list]

User Comment

Submitted ByDate
Comment
yourdatacenter.com2008-07-27 04:11:45
Seeing a large number of scans on this TCP port from all over the world. All originate from TCP port 12200. Some form of exploit no doubt. I would explicitly block this port to be safe.
Don Smith for Daniel J one of our readers2007-01-09 21:57:29
P2P applicaton framework gnucDNA http://www.gnucleus.com/GnucDNA
Lawrence Baldwin2006-06-11 19:49:03
There are certain older versions of GhostSurf which fire up by default as a wide-open proxy, as I reported last year here: http://www.tenebril.com/src/advisories/open-proxy-relay.php
Deb Hale2006-02-09 19:15:00
Associated with a product called GhostSurf by a company called Tenebril.
Add a comment

CVE Links

CVE #Description