Regards Alexander Alexander Neilson Neilson Productions Limited alexander@neilson.net.nz 021 329 681 022 456 2326 On 8/08/2013, at 9:47 AM, Marsh Ray <maray@microsoft.com> wrote:
From: Christopher Morrow Sent: Wednesday, August 7, 2013 2:06 PM
On Wed, Aug 7, 2013 at 4:59 PM, Marsh Ray <maray@microsoft.com> wrote:
It would be incredibly useful for someone to start a page or a category on
Wikipedia "List of Internet Routing and DNS Incidents" that would include both "accidental" and malicious events.
I would see there being a problem with Wikipedia trying to categorise some of them as accidental / malicious. I think if it was done it would have to be list where ones that were publicly announced as accidental would be listed as accidents and the rest left un noted to comply with neutral point of view and verification.
do we really need that?
Have you ever heard of someone using IP addresses as an access control mechanism? (AKA, "IP whitelist")
When I hear about this, I would really *love* to be able to link them to a credible source.
they seem to occur often enough that that isn't really required :(
*I* believe you, but in practice that's not sufficient to convince many other folks. Currently, a section of a page on Wikipedia lists 7 incidents going back to 1997. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_hijacking#Public_incidents
Serious question: Do folks here feel that is an accurate representation of this phenomenon in practice?
I would tend to say as it lists BGPmon.net as an external link thats a good resource for finding out about other ones that have happened. Also maybe that section should be renamed notable incidents and just have it as a sample of some of these incidents.
- Marsh