nanog mailing list archives

Re: Hijacked Network Ranges


From: Keegan Holley <keegan.holley () sungard com>
Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2012 13:22:04 -0500

You can break your blocks into /24's or smaller and readvertise them to
your upstreams.  You can also modify local preference using community tags
with most upstreams.  If you have tier 1 peerings you may be able to get
them to filter the bad routes if you can prove they were assigned to you by
ARIN.  There's no real way to get 100% of your traffic back until you get
the other company to stop advertising your routes though.  You may also get
traction from the AS's directly connected to the problem AS.  I'm not sure
how quickly you can get the other AS's to act on your behalf.  The short
blocks and local pref should get some of your traffic back though.


2012/1/31 Kelvin Williams <kwilliams () altuscgi com>

Greetings all.

We've been in a 12+ hour ordeal requesting that AS19181 (Cavecreek Internet
Exchange) immediately filter out network blocks that are being advertised
by ASAS33611 (SBJ Media, LLC) who provided to them a forged LOA.

The routes for networks: 208.110.48.0/20, 63.246.112.0/20, and
68.66.112.0/20 are registered in various IRRs all as having an origin AS
11325 (ours), and are directly allocated to us.

The malicious hijacking is being announced as /24s therefore making route
selection pick them.

Our customers and services have been impaired.  Does anyone have any
contacts for anyone at Cavecreek that would actually take a look at ARINs
WHOIS, and IRRs so the networks can be restored and our services back in
operation?

Additionally, does anyone have any suggestion for mitigating in the
interim?  Since we can't announce as /25s and IRRs are apparently a pipe
dream.

--
Kelvin Williams
Sr. Service Delivery Engineer
Broadband & Carrier Services
Altus Communications Group, Inc.


"If you only have a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail." --
Abraham Maslow




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