I'm curious, and my apologies if I missed it, but crocker.com is registered at Amazon, and the COM whois shows that it was Amazon's registrar that added the host records. Were you able to work with the Amazon registrar (not AWS), as one of their customers, to get the records removed; since crocker.com is not delegated to those servers? If not, that's a pretty big gap in their registrar offering. Doug http://registrar.amazon.com/ On 12/18/20 11:03 AM, Matthew Crocker wrote:
At this point I've basically given up and I'm moving the 66.59.48.x IPs to a new datacenter over the weekend. I'll move the DNS servers on the old IPs to the new datacenter and call it a day. We are trying to get all of the customers to re-register anyway, then I'll shut all of this down.
Thanks for the help
On 12/17/20, 3:16 PM, "NANOG on behalf of John R. Levine" <nanog-bounces+matthew=corp.crocker.com@nanog.org on behalf of johnl@iecc.com> wrote:
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> a czds dl, however, shows:
You're right, I checked again.
> :; zgrep -E ^dns-auth.\.crocker\.com com.txt.gz > dns-auth1.crocker.com. 172800 in a 66.59.48.87 > dns-auth2.crocker.com. 172800 in a 66.59.48.88 > dns-auth3.crocker.com. 172800 in a 66.59.48.94 > dns-auth4.crocker.com. 172800 in a 66.59.48.95 > > and leaving off the ^ shows that a large number of zones use those.
Since crocker.com uses different NS, I still don't see why they're in the .COM zone. Making inquiries.
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