nanog mailing list archives

Re: BGP Question - how do work around pigheaded ISPs


From: Stephen Griffin <stephen.griffin () rcn com>
Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 04:10:36 -0500 (EST)


A really quick inspection shows:
91.16.23.0/24 AS11770, although is is a history entry only at the moment:
route-views.oregon-ix.net>sh ip bgp 91.16.23.0
BGP routing table entry for 91.16.23.0/24, version 6427742
Paths: (23 available, no best path)
  Not advertised to any peer
  8517 9000 2548 1239 11770 (history entry)
...

103.22.7.0/24 AS9768
route-views.oregon-ix.net>sh ip bgp 103.22.7.0
BGP routing table entry for 103.22.7.0/24, version 6099648
Paths: (25 available, best #10)
  Not advertised to any peer
  2551 1239 3608 3608 3608 9768
    163.179.232.37 from 163.179.232.37 (163.179.232.37)
      Origin incomplete, localpref 100, valid, external
...

Stolen is a lot harder to find.

In the referenced message, Daniel L. Golding said:

Information on stolen or squatted address space should be published, to
ensure maximum shame for those involved.

Daniel Golding                           NetRail,Inc.
"Better to light a candle than to curse the darkness"

On Mon, 12 Feb 2001, John Fraizer wrote:


On Mon, 12 Feb 2001, Joe Provo wrote:


I have been aware of several times when squatted, stolen, or 
misconfigured-into-others'-space has been caught by registry-minded
filters.  Specifically regarding slices of classical B-space and
not yet allocated A-space.

Cheers,

Joe


Any time a network is caught announcing non-allocated address space, the
registry should bill them accordingly.  If they refuse to pay, the
registry should yank their ASN.  That would be strong encouragement to do
the right thing.

---
John Fraizer
EnterZone, Inc




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