We see this all the time with banking sites and some of the stock trading ones Todd On 1/28/2014 5:06 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:
On Jan 26, 2014, at 12:47 PM, Jay Ashworth <jra@baylink.com> wrote:
something like 6 years ago, and couldn't get any traction on it then; I'm not sure I think much has changed -- apparently, extracting your BP thoughts from mailing list postings and putting them into a wiki is more effort than most NANOGers are up to. I do have a list of the top ASNs that can be shown to allow IP spoofing by looking at the DNS scans part of the OpenResolverProject:
52731 ASN7922 31251 ASN9394 25241 ASN17964 15951 ASN4847 7576 ASN17430 5800 ASN17430 4110 ASN7497 3645 ASN9812 3492 ASN6854
http://openresolverproject.org/spoof-src-dst-asns-20140126.txt
What the data is:
It includes IP address where you send a DNS packet to it and another IP address responds to the query, e.g.:
[jared@hostname ~/spoof]$ dig @101.0.37.11 ;; reply from unexpected source: 182.19.83.65#53, expected 101.0.37.11#53
The data only includes those where the “source-ASN” and “dest-asn” of these packets don’t match.
- Jared
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