On Oct 2, 2020, at 2:50 PM, Matt Brennan <brennanma@gmail.com> wrote:A service I disconnected more than 2 years ago still has a /24 of their space SWIPED to me. Their NOC closed the ticket I opened to remove. Unknown if it's actually in use for another customer.I also had a conversation last week with another ISP (we were renegotiating our contract) about this. The order form they sent me had multiple /28's we had "given back" years ago still listed. Turns out they're still being routed to us as well.I would bet it happens all over the place.-MattOn Fri, Oct 2, 2020 at 2:00 PM Matt Hoppes <mattlists@rivervalleyinternet.net> wrote:I'm sitting here in the office on a Friday performing some IP
maintenance and I see that one of our upstreams is still filtering an IP
range we haven't used in years. I dig into it a bit more and it turns
out a major carrier still has them SWIPed to us.
This got me curious and I dug more into IPs from back in our early days
and discovered there are two Tier-1 carriers we no longer do business
with that still have large blocks of their own IPs SWIPED and allocated
to us.
This is really confusing and concerning. I know it's not the
end-all-be-all, but I wonder how much IPv4 exhaustion is being caused by
this type of IPv4 mis-management, where IPs are still shown as
"allocated" to a customer who hasn't used them in years.
I've seen this behavior from Frontier and CenturyLink to name just a few.
Any thoughts on this?