-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Apr 7, 2007, at 11:00 PM, Fergie wrote:
I would think that it's actually very easy to do when sub-allocations are SWIP'ed.
Not that I'm really defending this policy, but sub-allocations are very often not SWIPed. I'd say 75% or more of the time I'm looking a problem IP address it is part of a /19 or larger block with no sub- allocation. For example, I know for a fact that 70.167.38.132 is part of a netblock assigned to a business (I believe it is a /28 or /27). It is routed to them over a DS1 or similar cable equivalent. They run a handful of servers behind including public hosting a half dozen corporate web sites and a mail server. Clearly these addresses have been assigned to this business. Yet: owenc@corp:~$ whois 70.167.38.132Cox Communications Inc. NETBLK-COX- ATLANTA-10 (NET-70-160-0-0-1) 70.160.0.0 - 70.191.255.255 Cox Communications Inc. NETBLK-WI-OHFC-70-167-32-0 (NET-70-167-32-0-1) 70.167.32.0 - 70.167.63.255 No rwhois server available. And Cox is actually better than some. That's only a /19. I've seen much larger blocks than this. Somehow I doubt if we pulled that with our /20 I doubt we'd have a /19 now. Chris ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Chris Owen ~ Garden City (620) 275-1900 ~ Lottery (noun): President ~ Wichita (316) 858-3000 ~ A stupidity tax Hubris Communications Inc www.hubris.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.7 (Darwin) iD8DBQFGGCmzElUlCLUT2d0RAo2fAJwPXyy6LldTs7hEwHH+KkJ9fF9EewCfTyIf 0BHI2gDJX/s3FuZlLWkWwiM= =l33X -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----