nanog mailing list archives

Re: Suggestion: Add contact entry to whois


From: Dean Anderson <dean () av8 com>
Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 18:46:59 -0500

Well, he has a point. 

In this case, you can always 'ring up' his upstream provider, who can
either turn off the whole connection or block the offending host(s). Or
your upstream provider. 

I don't see this as being much different from "no-support" dialin services.
They may not be manned at all.  Most ISP's are planning for unmanned POP's.
It might not be all that long before we have providers with near total
lights out except for bean counters and maintenance people who replace
failed parts in fault tolerant equipment now and then. Some might say we
have that now ;-) Many places aren't 24 hour, and 24 hour staff doesn't
really buy all that much if the Noc operators can't make changes anyway.
So what use is a phone number?

Indeed, I recall that not so long ago people talked about taking contacts
away completely to prevent them from being used 'inappropriately', which I
think they meant as 'contact info is public to other NOC's only, and only
for NOC use, not customer support or anything else'

What people should really start thinking about is automated systems to do
these things, and authentication/trust relationships for other Nocs to make
changes and some kind of penalty for abuse of that system.

                --Dean

At 02:27 PM 2/26/1999 -0800, Dan Hollis wrote:
On Fri, 26 Feb 1999, Bob Allisat wrote:
 FCN gives no contacts for the Domain names
 registered here. It is no-one's business who
 registers with us. We are not in the business
 of acting as snitches for overly snoopy and
 prying computer system administrators. If any-
 one has a problem they can contact the police
 and, accompanied with an appropriate court
 order we will be happy to comply with any real,
 legitimate investigation. Otherwise fork off,
 nosey nerds, it's none of your darned business.

So in other words if an fcn host is found to be originating denial of
service attacks, you suggest we contact the local police and FBI rather
than ringing you up and asking you to disable their ongoing attacks.

And in the time it takes to process a court order you will continue to
allow those hosts to originate smurf/pingfloods etc.

Gotcha. So noted.

So we now know that when an fcn host is conducting denial of service
attacks, we should immediately start the paperwork filing for criminal
negligence and punitive damages ahead of time.

-Dan




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           Plain Aviation, Inc                  dean () av8 com
           LAN/WAN/UNIX/NT/TCPIP          http://www.av8.com
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