On Mon, 9 Apr 2007 michael.dillon@bt.com wrote:
If they're properly SWIPed why punish the ISP for networks they don't even operate, that obviously belong to their business customers?
How can you tell that they don't operate a network from SWIP records?
Seems to me that lots of network operators sell "managed services" to businesses which means that the network operator is the one operating the business customers' networks.
"OPERATING PARTS" of the business customers' networks ... 'managed services' means lots of things, anything from: "I'll manage your firewall" to "I'll manage that CPE router" to "I'll have feet on the street picking up crumbs in the hallways of your office buildings 24/7/365"... Assuming ... welp, that's dangerous :) So, what this is all getting back to (the whole 'abuse procedures' and 'dropping traffic because you dislike someone/some-ip/somecountry) is that essentially each site has the twin responsibilities to: 1) clean up their part of the network 2) decide who they want to accept traffic from The #1 above is only going to save you a minor amount of money (if any) and is going to assure that in the longer term your traffic might have a lower chance of being dropped by someone more draconian than you (say PaulV for instance). The #2 above is purely your own decision process, it may be driven by some business decisions/drivers (less money on email servers, less money on links, less firewall costs, customers that really do interact with <insert-bad-country-here>). You have to, as a network operator, decide how you want to deal with all of this. Taking any one person's opinion and using only that is surely going to lead to some bad decisions for your network.