No it was because we (Sprint, where I worked at that time) still felt that it was valuable. The change happened a couple of months after I left. From what I was told when the change happened, it was decided that it was no longer more important to do, then the pain it caused, because of massive increases in router memory, and the ability to do prefix-filters to clamp down on large eruptions. jon
Out of the ether, babylon@egenius.org spewed forth the following bitstream:
Actually Sprint continued filtering for 2 years after Sean left.
But was that because they could not figure out how to turn it off?
AlanC -- A plot, if there is to be one, must be a secret. A secret that, if | we only knew it, would dispel our frustration, lead us to salvation; | TSILB or else the knowing of it in itself would be salvation. |