Internet-wide scans

Why am I receiving traffic from the Technical University of Munich?

We conduct various regular and ad-hoc Internet-wide scans for protocols such as HTTPS, DNS, and BACnet. These are purely scientific and we never attempt to intrude into any system. We follow best practices laid out by the scientific community such as by Dittrich et al. 1, and Partridge and Allman 2.

We never attempt to abuse security vulnerabilities on your system, guess for passwords or upload files to your systems.

We may collect information about your service as far as they are publicly visible to everybody else on the Internet.

We hope that the data, we are collecting, helps us to understand the Internet better. We are an academic institution and will try to publish all our findings to a wider audience. However, we will never publish parts of our dataset which clearly identifies you or your company. More information about scans and publications can be found on the webpage of the Global INternet Observatory.

I do not want to be part of the research. How can I opt out?

You can just block connection attempts from our scanning systems or send us an E-Mail and we will add you and your network to our blacklist.

Host IPv6 address IPv4 address
planetlabX.net.in.tum.de 2001:4ca0:108:42::X 138.246.253.X
dallas 2600:3c00::f03c:91ff:fe3b:d2d 45.33.5.55
singapore 2400:8901::f03c:91ff:fe3b:d08 139.162.29.117

Contact

If you have further questions about our research, please contact us at scans@net.in.tum.de

References

  1. D. Dittrich, E. Kenneally et al., “The Menlo Report: Ethical Principles Guiding Information and Communication Technology Research,” US Department of Homeland Security, 2012. 

  2. C. Partridge and M. Allman, “Ethical Considerations in Network Measurement Papers”, Communications of the ACM, 2016.