Monday, June 9, 2025
HomeAWSMadPot: AWS Honeypot to Disrupt Threat Actors

MadPot: AWS Honeypot to Disrupt Threat Actors

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

In the realm of cybersecurity, the battle against threat actors never stops. With its vast cloud infrastructure, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is at the forefront of this ongoing struggle. 

AWS employs a global network of sensors and advanced disruption tools daily to detect and thwart hundreds of cyberattacks. 

These relentless efforts remain largely unseen but play a pivotal role in safeguarding AWS’s network, infrastructure, and customers. 

- Advertisement - Google News

Beyond protecting its own ecosystem, AWS collaborates with responsible providers to combat threat actors operating within their infrastructure, contributing to a safer internet as a whole.

Global-Scale Threat Intelligence with AWS Cloud:

AWS boasts the largest public network footprint of any cloud provider, granting it unparalleled real-time insight into internet activities. 

Leveraging this scale, AWS Principal Security Engineer Nima Sharifi Mehr pioneered innovative approaches to gather threat intelligence. 

The result was MadPot, an internal suite of tools designed for two primary purposes: detecting and monitoring threats and disrupting harmful activities when possible. 

MadPot has evolved into a sophisticated system of monitoring sensors and automated response capabilities.

MadPot: Mimicking Real Systems at Scale:

MadPot, resembling honeypots, deceives threat actors by appearing as a vast array of plausible innocent targets. 

This approach attracts threat actors, whose behavior is then observed and acted upon. 

MadPot sensors monitor over 100 million potential threat interactions daily, with around 500,000 classified as malicious. 

This wealth of threat intelligence is analyzed to provide actionable insights about potential harmful activity across the internet. 

Automated responses protect AWS’s network from identified threats, and relevant information is shared with companies whose infrastructure is used for malicious activities.

Swift Action and Disruption:

Internet probes detect it within approximately 90 seconds of deploying a new MadPot sensor. In just three minutes on average, attempts to penetrate and exploit it occur. 

MadPot then analyzes telemetry, code, network connections, and other threat actor behavior data points. 

High-confidence findings trigger disruptive actions, such as disconnecting threat actors from AWS networks. 

Additionally, threat data is shared with customers through Amazon GuardDuty, allowing their own tooling and automation to respond effectively.

Collaborating with the Security Community:

AWS actively collaborates with the security community, sharing threat intelligence findings. In the first quarter of 2023 alone:

– 5.5 billion signals from internet threat sensors and 1.5 billion signals from active network probes were used in anti-botnet security efforts.

– Over 1.3 million outbound botnet-driven DDoS attacks were stopped.

– Security intelligence findings were shared with hosting providers and domain registrars, including nearly a thousand botnet Command and Control (C2) hosts.

– 230,000 Layer 7/HTTP(S) DDoS attacks were traced back and disrupted.

Effectiveness in Action: Botnets, Sandworm, and Volt Typhoon:

MadPot has proven its effectiveness in identifying and mitigating threats across various infrastructure types. It has successfully disrupted DDoS botnets, aided in identifying and mitigating the Sandworm threat group, and contributed to dismantling state-sponsored threat actor Volt Typhoon.

The relentless efforts of AWS’s MadPot system demonstrate its commitment to securing the cloud and making the internet a safer place for all.

Protect yourself from vulnerabilities using Patch Manager Plus to quickly patch over 850 third-party applications. Take advantage of the free trial to ensure 100% security.

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Australian Naval Operations Accidentally Jam New Zealand’s Internet and Radio

Residents and businesses across New Zealand’s North and South Islands experienced an unexpected...

Malicious npm Utility Packages Enable Attackers to Wipe Production Systems

Socket's Threat Research Team has uncovered two malicious npm packages, express-api-sync and system-health-sync-api, designed...

HelloTDS Malware Spread via FakeCaptcha Infrastructure Infects Millions of Devices

In a Gen Threat Labs, a complex Traffic Direction System (TDS) dubbed "HelloTDS" has...

Critical Salesforce Vulnerability Exposes Global Users to SOQL Injection Attacks

In June 2025, a security researcher uncovered a critical SOQL (Salesforce Object Query Language)...

Credential Abuse: 15-Min Attack Simulation

Credential Abuse Unmasked

Credential abuse is #1 attack vector in web and API breaches today (Verizon DBIR 2025). Join our live, 15-min attack simulation with Karthik Krishnamoorthy (CTO - Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing - Indusface) to see hackers move from first probe to full account takeover.

Discussion points


Username & email enumeration – how a stray status-code reveals valid accounts.
Password spraying – low-and-slow guesses that evade basic lockouts.
Credential stuffing – lightning-fast reuse of breach combos at scale.
MFA / session-token bypass – sliding past second factors with stolen cookies.

More like this

Australian Naval Operations Accidentally Jam New Zealand’s Internet and Radio

Residents and businesses across New Zealand’s North and South Islands experienced an unexpected...

Malicious npm Utility Packages Enable Attackers to Wipe Production Systems

Socket's Threat Research Team has uncovered two malicious npm packages, express-api-sync and system-health-sync-api, designed...

HelloTDS Malware Spread via FakeCaptcha Infrastructure Infects Millions of Devices

In a Gen Threat Labs, a complex Traffic Direction System (TDS) dubbed "HelloTDS" has...
OSZAR »