If it's legacy, there are no bills?
I wonder whom did the ARIN have sent bills to.
On 8/15/19 12:40 PM, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
> As if to underscore the point I just tried to make about the fundamental
> unreliability of ARIN WHOIS records, I just stumbled onto this rather
> curious entity which was apparently given a sub-allocation of 216.179.183.0/24
> beneath the 216.179.128.0/17 (Azuki, Inc.) block as of 2012-01-10:
>
> OrgName: Rogers Communications Inc
> OrgId: RC-82
> Address: E 2nd St,Campbell
> City: Gillette
> StateProv: WY
> PostalCode: 82716
> Country: US
> RegDate: 2012-01-10
> Updated: 2012-01-10
> Ref: https://rdap.arin.net/registry/entity/RC-82
>
> Other that the fact that it has an oddly similar name to one of Canada's
> largest and most well-known Internet and cell phone companies, the only
> other thing that's rather remarkable about it is that it was given the
> 216.179.183.0/24 block, by Azuki, Inc. in 2012. What's odd about that?
> Well, only the fact that this *Wyoming* incarnation of Rogers Communications
> had apparently already died and gone to Valhalla some 14 years earlier,
> in 1998:
>
> https://wyobiz.wy.gov/Business/FilingDetails.aspx?eFNum=070023242004106130056183154143023082073130141117
>
> Moral of the story: Don't ever let anybody tell you that ghosts... even
> ghosts of long dead companies... aren't real or that they do not walk
> among us. Their immortal auras pervade the very ether we breath.
>
> And they have their own IPs, apparently.
>
> But, you know, if your customers are getting hack attacks emmanating from
> 216.179.183.0/24... well... to quote the old Ghostbusters tag line "Who
> you gonna call?" (Hint: Don't waste your time calling the number in the
> WHOIS record. It's just some bloody preschool.)
>
> Regards,
> rfg