DMARC Spoof Detection, Lithuania
Clear Clear FilterThis page shows DMARC authentication failures originating from Lithuania. Learn more about this data.
Lithuania accounts for 61 DMARC authentication failures observed by sh4meful over the observation window, sourced from 26 distinct IP addresses across 4 networks. This represents approximately 0.1% of total failure volume observed. Activity from Lithuania has increased over the last 30 days compared with the prior 30-day period. The most active source is LT-HOSTBALTIC-10 with 54 failures across 22 IP addresses.
61
26
4
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Top Networks in Lithuania
Ten most active networks sourcing DMARC failures from Lithuania:
| Network | Organization | Failures | Distinct IPs | Top City |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LT-HOSTBALTIC-10 | โ | 54 | 22 | โ |
| LT-ARMINAS-20191114 | โ | 3 | 1 | โ |
| LT-HOSTBALTIC-11 | โ | 3 | 2 | Vilnius |
| BiteMobile | โ | 1 | 1 | โ |
LT-HOSTBALTIC-10 and LT-ARMINAS-20191114 together account for 95% of failure volume from this country. Concentration in a small number of networks suggests targeted infrastructure rather than diffuse compromise.
Failure Activity Over Time
Peak activity was observed in the week of July 6, 2026 with 18 failures recorded. Activity in the most recent 30-day window increased sharply compared with the prior period (18 vs 0 failures).
Regional Context
Compared with peer geographies in Northern Europe, Lithuania's failure volume is above the regional median. Countries in this region collectively contributed 4% of failures observed.
Failures
Showing 61-61 of 61 failures, affecting 104 messages| Date โฒ | Source IP | Country | City | Network | Messages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7/10/2026 | LT Lithuania | 4 |
What This Means
Country-level patterns don't imply that mail from Lithuania is inherently malicious. Many failures reflect misconfigured legitimate senders, forwarded messages that break authentication, or automated infrastructure operating without authorization. Domain owners investigating a specific failure should look at the source IP and network details rather than the country alone. Our DMARC guide explains how to interpret these signals in your own reports.