It’s a problem with the miss-use of the RIR delegation of a legacy block. The assumption that because a block is assigned to a particular RIR, all users in that block have to be in that RIR’s territory, without actually running a query against that RIR’s Whois database. From: christopher.morrow@gmail.com [mailto:christopher.morrow@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Christopher Morrow Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2016 10:36 PM To: Suresh Ramasubramanian <ops.lists@gmail.com> Cc: Spurling, Shannon <shannon@more.net>; nanog@nanog.org Subject: Re: IPv4 Legacy assignment frustration how is this a problem with the RIR ? On Tue, Jun 21, 2016 at 11:01 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian <ops.lists@gmail.com<mailto:ops.lists@gmail.com>> wrote: There is absolutely no budgeting for idiots. Beyond a long hard process that is helped by internal escalations from affected people on a corporate network - ideally as senior as you can get - ot their IT staff. “Missouri isn’t in China, you nitwit. Fix it or I, the CFO, will go have a word with the CIO and ..” In other words, have affected people escalate up the chain to the ISP or more likely corporate IT team that’s doing this sort of stupid filteringg.
On 21-Jun-2016, at 8:07 PM, Spurling, Shannon <shannon@more.net<mailto:shannon@more.net>> wrote:
I am not sure how many on the list are Legacy resource holders from before the RIR's were established, but there is an extremely short sighted security practice that is being used across the internet.
Apparently, the RIR that has been given "authority" for an IP prefix range that was a legacy assignment is being used as a geographical locator for those prefixes. For instance, we provide access for several /16's that are in the 150/8 prefix that was set as APNIC. I am aware of quite a few organizations in the US that have prefixes in that range. We have registered our legacy resources with ARIN, but there are some people insist that somehow the state of Missouri must be part of China because... "APNIC!". They set firewalls and access rules based on that, and are hard pressed to not fix them.
Is there any way to raise awareness to this inconsistency so that security people will stop doing this?