On Fri, 2009-12-11 at 17:25 -0800, Alex Lanstein wrote:
William Pitcock wrote:
Cernal and Atrivo are two different entities, Atrivo used to host Cernal, but now they have different hosting arrangements.
I now understand the original point you were trying to make about Atrivo. I disagree with your premise that it is actually a different entity than Cernel, but am not trying to debate that on this list for various reasons.
Then why did you make the post?
Acting under my (incorrect or correct) assumption that they are in fact the same entity, I made my post to show that "the boys were back".
They are separate entities, and Cernal hosts with other providers, and did so while Atrivo existed as well. Infact, read below for some poignant analysis on this fact.
That is, for a decent amount of time, parts of 85.255.112.0/20 were not being advertised, and hence the dns hijacking pointing selected http traffic to 67.210.0.0/20 wasn't happening.
My point was that it (fairly) recently started being advertised again, and it was the same old song and dance wrt dns/http hijacking/fraud.
That doesn't surprise me, but I see it coming from Amazon EC2. Infact, traceroutes end at 67.210.14.1, which is a router servicing the EC2 cloud. 85.255.112.0/20 appears to be announced by Bandcon / Internet-Path in the NYC area. I believe that Amazon EC2's NYC cloud uses these providers, but not 100% sure on that one. Regardless, Amazon EC2 is not Atrivo, at all, period, and if you believe that it is, you're bloody crazy. William