AnyDesk
AnyDesk is a proprietary remote desktop software application developed and distributed by AnyDesk Software GmbH, a company founded in 2014 in Stuttgart, Germany, that enables platform-independent remote access and control of computers, servers, and mobile devices with emphasis on low-latency performance even over limited bandwidth connections.[1][2][3] The software supports cross-platform compatibility across Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS, featuring secure TLS 1.2 encryption, file transfer capabilities, and unattended access for professional and personal use.[4][5] AnyDesk gained prominence for its speed and reliability, becoming one of Germany's fastest-growing technology firms and raising over $70 million in Series C funding in 2021 at a $660 million valuation, with millions of users worldwide relying on it for remote work, IT support, and device management.[6][2] However, the company faced significant scrutiny following a February 2024 cyberattack that compromised its production systems, prompting a full revocation of security certificates, mandatory password resets for all users, and revelations of stolen credentials appearing on dark web markets, highlighting vulnerabilities in remote access tools despite the software's built-in security measures.[7][8][9] Additionally, AnyDesk has been frequently exploited by threat actors in scams and malware distribution, where attackers impersonate legitimate support entities to gain unauthorized access, underscoring broader risks associated with remote desktop protocols regardless of the provider's intentions.[10][11]Company and History
Founding and Development
AnyDesk Software GmbH was established in 2014 in Stuttgart, Germany, by co-founders Philipp Weiser, Olaf Liebe, and Andreas Mähler.[12] Weiser, who holds a graduate degree in physics and serves as the company's CEO, drove the initial vision for a high-performance remote desktop solution, motivated by frustrations with existing tools' latency and resource demands.[13] [14] The team, including some former employees from competitor TeamViewer, sought to innovate in remote access technology.[15] Development centered on creating a lightweight application powered by the proprietary DeskRT video codec, engineered for ultra-low latency, high frame rates up to 60 fps, and efficient bandwidth usage even on low-speed connections.[12] This codec formed the core of AnyDesk's protocol, enabling seamless screen sharing and control across devices without heavy dependencies. The software launched publicly in 2014, emphasizing cross-platform compatibility from the outset, including Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile variants.[16] Early iterations prioritized simplicity and speed, distinguishing AnyDesk from resource-intensive alternatives and facilitating rapid adoption among individual users and small businesses.[14]Expansion and Key Milestones
AnyDesk experienced rapid growth following its initial launch, with downloads surpassing 100 million worldwide by the early 2020s.[3] In 2020, the company reported a 170 percent year-over-year increase in sales, driven by surging demand for remote access tools amid global shifts to distributed work.[17] This period also saw the number of paying customers double to 50,000, reflecting expanded adoption across individual and enterprise users.[17] To fuel international expansion, particularly into the United States, AnyDesk secured investments from growth equity firms including Insight Partners and EQT Ventures in early 2020.[18] These partnerships enabled the establishment of a U.S. presence and positioned the company among Germany's 50 fastest-growing businesses.[19] By November 2021, AnyDesk raised over €60 million ($70 million) in a Series C funding round led by General Atlantic, with participation from prior investors, achieving a valuation exceeding $660 million.[6] This brought total funding to approximately $77.8 million across multiple rounds, supporting further scaling of operations and technology development.[20] Subsequent milestones included the launch of a global channel partner program on March 1, 2022, aimed at enhancing distribution through resellers and integrators.[21] The company grew its workforce to around 400 employees, maintaining its headquarters in Stuttgart while expanding offices internationally.[22] These developments underscored AnyDesk's transition from a startup to a prominent player in remote desktop software, with sustained emphasis on performance-driven remote access solutions.[23]Technical Foundation
Core Technology and Protocol
AnyDesk's core technology revolves around its proprietary DeskRT video codec, which serves as the foundation for efficient remote desktop streaming. Developed in-house, DeskRT compresses and transmits image data while maintaining high-quality video and audio reproduction with minimal bandwidth usage, supporting frame rates up to 60 fps and achieving latency as low as 16 ms under optimal conditions.[24] This codec prioritizes adaptive compression techniques to handle varying network conditions, differentiating it from standard protocols like Microsoft's RDP by focusing on real-time performance rather than file-based transmission.[25][26] The communication protocol is also proprietary, encapsulating DeskRT streams within a custom framework that automatically selects optimal routing and connection methods, such as direct peer-to-peer links when possible or relayed connections via AnyDesk's servers for firewall traversal.[27] Security is integrated at the protocol level through TLS 1.3 for channel encryption, ensuring perfect forward secrecy, alongside RSA 2048-bit asymmetric key exchange for session verification and 256-bit AES for data transport.[28][29] This combination prevents man-in-the-middle attacks and unauthorized interception, with all connections requiring explicit consent via unique session IDs.[28] Unlike open protocols, AnyDesk's implementation remains closed-source, allowing fine-tuned optimizations for cross-platform compatibility but limiting third-party interoperability or auditing of the underlying mechanics.[30] The protocol supports dynamic bandwidth adjustment, scaling data rates from under 100 kbps for basic sessions to higher thresholds for uncompressed modes, which contributes to its reported efficiency over competitors in low-resource environments.[24][31]Performance Characteristics
AnyDesk achieves low-latency remote desktop connections primarily through its proprietary DeskRT video codec, which optimizes image compression and transmission for real-time responsiveness. Independent benchmarks, such as the 2020 PassMark Remote Desktop Product Performance test, recorded AnyDesk delivering the highest frame rates and lowest latency among tested products, including TeamViewer and LogMeIn, while requiring significantly lower bandwidth.[32] The codec enables frame rates up to 60 fps with bandwidth usage as low as 100 kbit/s, supporting smooth operation even on constrained networks.[33] In latency-specific evaluations, AnyDesk demonstrated near-zero milliseconds in controlled tests, outperforming competitors like RemotePC and RDP in responsiveness metrics.[34][35] User-reported experiences and comparative reviews corroborate these results, noting superior performance for tasks requiring quick screen updates, such as video playback or graphical applications, particularly on networks with limited throughput.[36] However, actual performance varies with factors like network conditions, hardware capabilities, and connection distance; tests indicate degradation beyond 100 Mbps symmetric links is minimal, but high-latency WANs can introduce perceptible delays.[37] Bandwidth efficiency stems from DeskRT's adaptive compression, which prioritizes dynamic screen changes over static areas, reducing data transmission without sacrificing visual fidelity.[24] This contrasts with general-purpose codecs in alternatives, leading to AnyDesk's edge in low-bandwidth scenarios, as evidenced by its top rankings in resource utilization during multi-product speed tests.[38] For demanding applications like remote gaming or 4K streaming, frame rates hold steady at 30-60 fps under optimal conditions, though independent validations emphasize its strengths in office productivity over high-motion gaming.[39]Features and Functionality
Primary Capabilities
AnyDesk enables users to remotely view and control the desktop of another device in real time, transmitting screen content with minimal latency through its proprietary DeskRT codec, which supports frame rates up to 60 fps under optimal conditions. This interactive access allows full keyboard and mouse input on the remote machine, mimicking local operation, and is compatible across Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android platforms for cross-device connectivity.[40][1] The software supports unattended access, permitting connections to remote devices without requiring active user confirmation on the target system, provided prior setup via password or alias configuration; this is essential for IT administration and remote monitoring scenarios. File transfer capabilities allow bidirectional exchange of documents, folders, or executables between connected endpoints during sessions, with drag-and-drop integration for efficiency.[41][42] Screen sharing extends to collaborative modes, including a digital whiteboard for annotations during joint sessions and session requests that queue incoming connections for managed approval. Privacy controls, such as screen blackening on the remote device, ensure sensitive data remains hidden from onlookers while maintaining control functionality.[4][43]Platform Support and Integrations
AnyDesk supports a wide array of desktop, mobile, and embedded operating systems, enabling cross-platform remote access sessions between disparate devices.[44] Desktop compatibility includes Windows from XP SP2 onward (encompassing versions 7 through 11 and Server editions from 2003 SP2), macOS from version 10.13 (High Sierra) to the latest releases, and various Linux distributions such as Ubuntu, Red Hat, and openSUSE, with a generic 64-bit package available for broader Linux support.[45] Additional desktop and embedded platforms include FreeBSD and Raspberry Pi OS.[46]| Platform Category | Supported Systems |
|---|---|
| Desktop | Windows (XP SP2+), macOS (10.13+), Linux (Ubuntu, Red Hat, openSUSE, generic 64-bit), FreeBSD, Raspberry Pi |
| Mobile | Android, iOS |
| Other | Chrome OS, Apple TV |
Security Measures
Encryption and Authentication
AnyDesk employs 256-bit AES for transport encryption of data streams during remote sessions, ensuring that transmitted content such as screen data, keystrokes, and file transfers remains protected against interception.[28] This end-to-end encryption is complemented by TLS 1.2 (with support for TLS 1.3 in compliant deployments) using AEAD modes, which secures the communication channel between client and host devices.[52] [53] Additionally, asymmetric key exchange via 2048-bit RSA keys verifies endpoint integrity and establishes secure connections with perfect forward secrecy, preventing decryption of past sessions even if long-term keys are compromised.[54] For authentication, AnyDesk requires a unique AnyDesk-ID or alias for initiating connections, paired with permission-based access that defaults to unattended setups secured by passwords.[28] Account logins utilize salted password hashing to store credentials securely on AnyDesk's servers, mitigating risks from database breaches.[28] To enhance protection, two-factor authentication (2FA) is available for my.anydesk II accounts and unattended access, involving a primary password followed by a time-limited one-time code generated via an authenticator app after scanning a QR code.[55] [56] This multi-factor approach, configurable through account settings, adds a device-bound verification layer independent of SMS, reducing vulnerability to phishing.[57] While effective for authorized users, authentication relies on user-configured strengths, such as complex passwords and timely 2FA enablement, as weaker defaults have been noted in security analyses.[54]Incident Response and Vulnerabilities
In February 2024, AnyDesk disclosed a security incident involving the compromise of its production systems, detected during a routine security audit on February 1. Attackers gained unauthorized access, exfiltrating source code and private code-signing certificates, but the company stated no customer data was affected.[7][58] AnyDesk's incident response included immediately taking affected systems offline, revoking the compromised code-signing certificates to prevent misuse in malware distribution, and rebuilding infrastructure from trusted backups. The company advised users to update to the latest software version, regenerate passwords, and monitor for suspicious activity, emphasizing that stolen certificates had been exploited in subsequent malware campaigns by threat actors. No evidence emerged of broader supply chain impacts beyond certificate abuse, though cybersecurity firms noted increased risks from signed malicious binaries evading detection.[59][60][61] Known vulnerabilities in AnyDesk include CVE-2024-52940, affecting versions up to 8.1.0 on Windows when "Allow Direct Connections" is enabled, which exposes users' public IP addresses in network traffic, potentially enabling targeted attacks or doxxing. This flaw, classified as high severity, stems from unencrypted metadata leakage and was patched in subsequent releases, with recommendations for disabling direct connections where possible.[62][63] Another vulnerability, CVE-2024-12754, permits local attackers with initial access to disclose sensitive information from AnyDesk installations, including configuration data, via improper access controls; a proof-of-concept exploit was publicly released in early 2025. Exploitation requires prior system compromise, limiting remote threat but highlighting risks in multi-user environments. AnyDesk addressed this through updates enforcing stricter local permissions.[64][65] Earlier, CVE-2022-32450 in AnyDesk 7.0.9 allowed local privilege escalation to SYSTEM level via symbolic links in the user's %APPDATA% folder, exploited by writing to ad.trace and ad.log files during service operations. This was mitigated in later versions by sanitizing file handling and restricting service privileges.[66] AnyDesk maintains a vulnerability disclosure program, encouraging responsible reporting, though critics from security vendors have questioned the efficacy of its core architecture in preventing such issues, citing repeated incidents as evidence of foundational weaknesses in remote access protocols.[54]Legitimate Applications and Reception
Use Cases and Adoption
AnyDesk is primarily employed for remote technical support, enabling IT professionals to diagnose and resolve issues on end-user devices without physical presence. This application is common in enterprise environments for troubleshooting hardware and software problems, such as network configurations or application errors, with case studies highlighting its use by firms like Stefanini IT Solutions for efficient customer service delivery.[67][68] It supports unattended access to devices, allowing administrators to perform maintenance during off-hours, as utilized in server administration tasks.[68][31] In remote work and collaboration, AnyDesk facilitates secure access to workstations from various locations, supporting hybrid work models accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. For instance, photographer Deniz Saylan relies on it for editing sessions over unstable internet connections, while AutoForm Engineering uses it for remote training on resource-intensive simulation software.[69][70] Educational and governmental entities, including schools and courts, adopt it for virtual sessions and administrative tasks.[67] Personal users apply it for informal support, such as assisting family with device setup or operating remote equipment like telescopes.[71][72] Adoption has expanded rapidly, with over 200,000 customers worldwide as of recent reports, including organizations like ESET, Instructure, and Aditya Birla Capital for remote monitoring and management.[67][73] Downloads reached 100 million by July 2019, growing by 5 million monthly, and doubled to 300 million in 2020 amid surging remote work demand.[74][75] The software processes more than 200 million sessions monthly across 190 countries, with prevalence among small to medium enterprises (50-200 employees, $1M-10M revenue).[76][77] In 2021, AnyDesk secured $70 million in funding at a $660 million valuation, reflecting market confidence in its infrastructure for professional remote access.[6]User and Expert Reviews
User reviews of AnyDesk are mixed across platforms, reflecting strong praise for its technical performance alongside frequent criticisms of billing and support practices. On Capterra, it holds a 4.6 out of 5 rating from 1,761 verified reviews as of October 2025, with users highlighting its ease of use, clear visuals, and adaptability to varying network speeds for remote access and support tasks.[78] Similarly, G2 users commend its quick setup, low latency on stable connections, and reliability for file transfers and remote control, often describing it as user-friendly for both personal and team collaboration.[79] In contrast, Trustpilot shows a lower aggregate of 2.3 out of 5 from over 1,254 reviews, where dissatisfaction centers on prolonged connection times, difficulties with subscription cancellations, and perceived aggressive billing tactics, though some note its effective file manipulation features.[80] Expert evaluations emphasize AnyDesk's strengths in speed and usability while noting limitations in advanced features compared to enterprise alternatives. TechRadar assigned it a 4 out of 5 rating in a July 2024 review, lauding its stability, intuitive interface, and rapid session initiation, positioning it as a strong contender for remote desktop needs, particularly for users prioritizing low-latency performance over extensive customization.[81] In comparative analyses, experts from TechRadar have ranked AnyDesk favorably against competitors like TeamViewer for pricing efficiency and ease of deployment, though it trails in scalability for large-scale business environments.[82] Overall, professionals value its lightweight design and cross-platform compatibility but caution that occasional lag on poor networks and reliance on paid tiers for full functionality may deter casual users.[83]| Review Platform | Overall Rating | Key Strengths Cited | Key Criticisms Cited | Number of Reviews |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capterra | 4.6/5 | Ease of use, low lag, pricing | Occasional quality limits, lag on weak networks | 1,761[78] |
| G2 | High (user pros dominant) | Quick setup, file sharing, remote support | N/A in aggregates | Not specified[79] |
| Trustpilot | 2.3/5 | File tools, core functionality | Billing issues, connection delays, support | 1,254+[80] |
| TechRadar (Expert) | 4/5 | Stability, interface speed | Limited advanced options | N/A[81] |