For those prefixes announced by ConEd within the last 3 days that it no longer owns, correct, it would not of helped. But saving some is certainly better than none. For the second statement things get a little more subtle. We have considered allowing the trusted originator of a prefix to split the space among itself and those downstream of it without considering that suspicious behavior. This allows ASs to protect themselves via such methods. Thanks for your comments! Josh On 1/23/06, Thor Lancelot Simon <tls@netbsd.org> wrote:
On Mon, Jan 23, 2006 at 12:47:38PM -0700, Josh Karlin wrote:
Suspicious routes are those that originate at an AS that has not originated the prefix in the last few days and those that introduce sub-prefixes. Sub-prefixes are always considered suspicious (~1 day) and traffic will be routed to the super-prefix for the suspicious period.
So, if you consider the recent Cone-D hijacking incident, it seems to me that:
1) Cone-D's announcement of _some_ of the prefixes they announced would have been considered "suspicious" -- but not all, since some of the prefixes in question were for former customers or peers who had only recently terminated their business arrangements with Cone-D.
2) Panix's first, obvious countermeasure aimed at restoring their connectivity -- announcing their own address space split in half -- would *also* have been considered suspicious, since it gave two "sub-prefixes" of what Cone-D was hijacking.
Unless I misunderstand what you're proposing -- which is entirely possible, in fact perhaps even likely -- it seems to me that it might well have done at least as much harm as good.
Thor