Sounds right to me. Unless someone else can prove ownership of the allocation beyond a doubt I would leave it up and running. Steven Naslund Chicago IL -----Original Message----- From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Sean Pedersen Sent: Monday, March 12, 2018 2:46 PM To: nop@imap.cc; nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: Proof of ownership; when someone demands you remove a prefix Without revealing too much identifying information, the prefix is allocated to a 3rd party that is a customer of our customer. We have a signed LOA on hand that matches the RIR database object details (names, prefix, etc.), and the request to stop announcing came from another 3rd party that does not appear to be related to either our customer or their customer. Both the individual making the demand as well as the 3rd party that "owns" the prefix are in industries that suggest things are not entirely above-board. The email came from a IP broker domain whose TLD is an eastern European country. At this point I'm going to have to rely on our customer's POC, whom I've already contacted, to verify whether or not this is true and err in their favor. I was just curious what others have experienced. Since so much of the Internet is "best effort" in terms of validation, I wasn't sure if there was much else that could be done. -----Original Message----- From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces@nanog.org] On Behalf Of nop@imap.cc Sent: Monday, March 12, 2018 12:08 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Re: Proof of ownership; when someone demands you remove a prefix I've seen this type of situation come up more than a few times with the shadier IP brokers that lease and don't care who they lease to, for example Logicweb, Cloudinnovation ( see bgp.he.net/search?search[search]=cloudinnovation+OR+%22cloud+innovation%22 ), Digital Energy-host1plus. The ranges get abused to hell and back for garbage traffic selling, rate limit bypassing, scraping, proxies, banned from youtube/google/etc for view and like farms, and then thrown away, and the leaser tries to get them unannounced quickly for further resale. On Mon, Mar 12, 2018, at 11:57 AM, Matt Harris wrote:
On Mon, Mar 12, 2018 at 1:46 PM, Sean Pedersen <spedersen.lists@gmail.com> wrote:
We recently received a demand to stop announcing a "fraudulent" prefix. Is there an industry best practice when handling these kind of requests? Do you have personal or company-specific preferences or requirements? To the best of my knowledge, we've rarely, if ever, received such a request. This is relatively new territory.
This could definitely be an attempt at a DoS attack, and wouldn't be the first time I've heard of something like this being done as such.
I thought about requesting they make changes to their RIR database objects
to confirm ownership, but all that does is verify that person has access to the account tied to the ORG/resource, not ownership. Current entries in the database list the same ORG and contact that signed the LOA. When do you get to the point where things look "good enough" to believe someone?
They may also be leasing one chunk of space from an organization without actually having access to the RIR db too - in that case, they could ask the org they are leasing from to put in a SWIP with the RIR, but if they don't choose to, then that's not a hard requirement.
On the same token, having access to the org account at the RIR pretty much makes you as legitimate as you're going to be as far as any of us can really tell. If there's an issue where the RIR account has been compromised, then that issue lies between the RIR and their customer, and isn't really your business because you have no way to know whatsoever.
Has anyone gone so far as to make the requestor provide something like a notarized copy stating ownership? Have you ever gotten legal departments involved? The RIR?
A notarized copy stating *ownership* seems overboard. Lots of organizations lease IPv4 space, and lots more now since depletion in many regions, and their use of it is entirely legitimate in accordance with their contractual rights established in the lease agreement with the owner. I'd probably think about looking at the contact info in the RIR whois and ask them, if I had a situation like this myself. Ultimately, the RIR's contact which would be in their whois db should be authoritative more so than anyone else. I doubt the RIR would be able to say much if you contacted them beyond that everything that isn't in whois isn't something they'd share publicly.
Take care, Matt