What This Port Is
Port 10043 is an unassigned user port. It falls within the registered port range (1024–49151) defined by IANA, which means it's available for documented services but not reserved for any specific application.1 Think of it like an available address in a neighborhood: anyone can use it if they register the use properly, but right now, it belongs to no one officially.
The Port Range and What Unassigned Means
The registered port range (1024–49151) exists specifically for services that need documented port numbers but don't require the kernel-level privileges of system ports (0–1023). Ports in this range can be requested and assigned to new applications by IANA following formal procedures.2
When IANA lists a port as "unassigned," it means:
- No application has officially registered that port number
- It's available for anyone to request
- It may be in use by custom applications or proprietary tools
- It's often used by services that don't require formal IANA registration
Known Uses: Anything and Everything
Port 10043 appears in malware threat intelligence databases, though not attached to any specific, well-known trojan or malware family.3 This doesn't make it dangerous—it means various malicious tools have, at various times, happened to use it. Unassigned ports are attractive to malware because they're not being actively monitored.
On legitimate systems, port 10043 might be used by:
- Custom enterprise applications
- Research tools or local development servers
- Lesser-known software you installed and forgot about
- Nothing at all (if nothing is listening on it)
How to Check What's Actually Listening
On macOS or Linux:
On Windows:
Across platforms (if you have netcat installed):
If something is listening and you don't recognize it, investigate the process name and search for what it does. Most of the time, it's just something you installed.
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The Internet doesn't run out of ports—there are 65,535 of them. What matters is that some are officially designated for well-known services (SSH on 22, HTTPS on 443), some are reserved for system use, and the rest are available for the endless variety of software we keep inventing.
Unassigned ports are how new applications enter the ecosystem. They're also how services hide from casual observation. A malware author can pick a random unassigned port knowing that most security scanners are watching the famous ones.
Port 10043 is unremarkable precisely because no one has claimed it. It will probably stay that way until someone does.
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