Any clue as to when bgp.he.net will be back?
Hi, Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ is a great tool and shows the same info. Ian
On 1/16/24 2:44 PM, Ian Chilton wrote:
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ <https://bgp.tools/> is a great tool and shows the same info.
They need to fix their page regarding cost. Originates less than a /15 - 25 pounds/month Originates more than a /15 - 200 pounds/month. What if someone originates a /15? That's one of the prefix sizes we originate. They need a 'less than or equal to' thingie in there. scott
It only applies if you are purchasing their monitoring services. Not just to use the site for info. On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 5:04 PM scott via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> wrote:
On 1/16/24 2:44 PM, Ian Chilton wrote:
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ <https://bgp.tools/> is a great tool and shows the same info.
They need to fix their page regarding cost.
Originates less than a /15 - 25 pounds/month
Originates more than a /15 - 200 pounds/month.
What if someone originates a /15? That's one of the prefix sizes we originate. They need a 'less than or equal to' thingie in there.
scott
Fixed, cheers for pointing that logical error out :) $ git show commit 689bca929c5d3a27e6aa4f12195bf3b81b3be719 (HEAD -> master) Author: Ben Cartwright-Cox <x> Date: Tue Jan 16 23:17:08 2024 +0000 clarify pricing for a nanog person https://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/2024-January/224556.html diff --git a/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html b/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html index 5d1a4dbd..3ca554a3 100644 --- a/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html +++ b/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html @@ -443,7 +443,7 @@ <div class="card-body"> <h1 class="card-title pricing-card-title">£200 <small class="text-muted">/ mo</small></h1> <ul class="list-unstyled mt-3 mb-4"> - <li>Originates more than a /15 of IPv4</li> + <li>Originates a /15 or more of IPv4 addresses</li> <li>-</li> <li>Is tagged as a <a href="/tags/cdn">CDN</a> or <a href="/tags/ddosm">DDoS Mitigation provider</a></li> <li>-</li> On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 10:04 PM scott via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> wrote:
On 1/16/24 2:44 PM, Ian Chilton wrote:
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ <https://bgp.tools/> is a great tool and shows the same info.
They need to fix their page regarding cost.
Originates less than a /15 - 25 pounds/month
Originates more than a /15 - 200 pounds/month.
What if someone originates a /15? That's one of the prefix sizes we originate. They need a 'less than or equal to' thingie in there.
scott
:: On 1/16/24 11:20 PM, Ben Cox wrote: :: Fixed, cheers for pointing that logical error out :) Thanks! scott On 1/16/24 11:20 PM, Ben Cox wrote:
Fixed, cheers for pointing that logical error out :)
$ git show commit 689bca929c5d3a27e6aa4f12195bf3b81b3be719 (HEAD -> master) Author: Ben Cartwright-Cox <x> Date: Tue Jan 16 23:17:08 2024 +0000
clarify pricing for a nanog person
https://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/2024-January/224556.html
diff --git a/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html b/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html index 5d1a4dbd..3ca554a3 100644 --- a/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html +++ b/www/templates/layouts/utils.tmpl.html @@ -443,7 +443,7 @@ <div class="card-body"> <h1 class="card-title pricing-card-title">£200 <small class="text-muted">/ mo</small></h1> <ul class="list-unstyled mt-3 mb-4"> - <li>Originates more than a /15 of IPv4</li> + <li>Originates a /15 or more of IPv4 addresses</li> <li>-</li> <li>Is tagged as a <a href="/tags/cdn">CDN</a> or <a href="/tags/ddosm">DDoS Mitigation provider</a></li> <li>-</li>
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 10:04 PM scott via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> wrote:
On 1/16/24 2:44 PM, Ian Chilton wrote:
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ <https://bgp.tools/> is a great tool and shows the same info.
They need to fix their page regarding cost.
Originates less than a /15 - 25 pounds/month
Originates more than a /15 - 200 pounds/month.
What if someone originates a /15? That's one of the prefix sizes we originate. They need a 'less than or equal to' thingie in there.
scott
+1 for bgp.tools, it is a superior tool. Sadly, the corporate IT-forced DNS filtering at work for “cybersecurity” (Mimecast) thinks it is a compromised website for some reason, so bgp.he.net<http://bgp.he.net> ends up being used while I am at the office. On Jan 16, 2024, at 8:44 AM, Ian Chilton <ian@ichilton.co.uk> wrote: Hi, Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ is a great tool and shows the same info. Ian
It might be due to usage of a new gTLD like .tools. A number of new gTLDs use heavy discounting and this is a magnet for abusive registrations, unfortunately. Rubens On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 2:15 PM Tim Burke <tim@mid.net> wrote:
+1 for bgp.tools, it is a superior tool. Sadly, the corporate IT-forced DNS filtering at work for “cybersecurity” (Mimecast) thinks it is a compromised website for some reason, so bgp.he.net ends up being used while I am at the office.
On Jan 16, 2024, at 8:44 AM, Ian Chilton <ian@ichilton.co.uk> wrote:
Hi,
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ is a great tool and shows the same info.
Ian
It'd be interesting to know how Mimecast made the determination that bgp.tools is compromised. Regards, Christopher Hawker On Thu, 18 Jan 2024 at 09:47, Rubens Kuhl <rubensk@gmail.com> wrote:
It might be due to usage of a new gTLD like .tools. A number of new gTLDs use heavy discounting and this is a magnet for abusive registrations, unfortunately.
Rubens
On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 2:15 PM Tim Burke <tim@mid.net> wrote:
+1 for bgp.tools, it is a superior tool. Sadly, the corporate IT-forced
DNS filtering at work for “cybersecurity” (Mimecast) thinks it is a compromised website for some reason, so bgp.he.net ends up being used while I am at the office.
On Jan 16, 2024, at 8:44 AM, Ian Chilton <ian@ichilton.co.uk> wrote:
Hi,
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it,
https://bgp.tools/ is a great tool and shows the same info.
Ian
I spoke with someone at Mimecast and we concluded the the customer of mimecast has setup that rule (likely the whole of *.tools), since they could not find anything on there end that didnt like bgp.tools On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 10:54 PM Christopher Hawker <chris@thesysadmin.au> wrote:
It'd be interesting to know how Mimecast made the determination that bgp.tools is compromised.
Regards, Christopher Hawker
On Thu, 18 Jan 2024 at 09:47, Rubens Kuhl <rubensk@gmail.com> wrote:
It might be due to usage of a new gTLD like .tools. A number of new gTLDs use heavy discounting and this is a magnet for abusive registrations, unfortunately.
Rubens
On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 2:15 PM Tim Burke <tim@mid.net> wrote:
+1 for bgp.tools, it is a superior tool. Sadly, the corporate IT-forced DNS filtering at work for “cybersecurity” (Mimecast) thinks it is a compromised website for some reason, so bgp.he.net ends up being used while I am at the office.
On Jan 16, 2024, at 8:44 AM, Ian Chilton <ian@ichilton.co.uk> wrote:
Hi,
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ is a great tool and shows the same info.
Ian
I tried going to bgp.tools at the office the day after I sent that email and was able to get to it, so must've just been some goofiness. ________________________________ From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+tim=mid.net@nanog.org> on behalf of Ben Cox via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> Sent: Tuesday, January 23, 2024 7:51 AM To: chris@thesysadmin.au <chris@thesysadmin.au> Cc: nanog <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: Re: Any clue as to when bgp.he.net will be back? I spoke with someone at Mimecast and we concluded the the customer of mimecast has setup that rule (likely the whole of *.tools), since they could not find anything on there end that didnt like bgp.tools On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 10:54 PM Christopher Hawker <chris@thesysadmin.au> wrote:
It'd be interesting to know how Mimecast made the determination that bgp.tools is compromised.
Regards, Christopher Hawker
On Thu, 18 Jan 2024 at 09:47, Rubens Kuhl <rubensk@gmail.com> wrote:
It might be due to usage of a new gTLD like .tools. A number of new gTLDs use heavy discounting and this is a magnet for abusive registrations, unfortunately.
Rubens
On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 2:15 PM Tim Burke <tim@mid.net> wrote:
+1 for bgp.tools, it is a superior tool. Sadly, the corporate IT-forced DNS filtering at work for “cybersecurity” (Mimecast) thinks it is a compromised website for some reason, so bgp.he.net ends up being used while I am at the office.
On Jan 16, 2024, at 8:44 AM, Ian Chilton <ian@ichilton.co.uk> wrote:
Hi,
Not a direct answer to your question, but if you're not aware of it, https://bgp.tools/ is a great tool and shows the same info.
Ian
As someone said on a different thread, and it worked for me, check your ad/script blockers. I disabled mine for the site and the site came back to life for me. A -- Alec Edworthy A.Edworthy@lboro.ac.uk
My Windows Chrome nor Android Chrome have any ad/script blockers. Both showed me the error page. Looks like it's showing me the tool now, though. On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 12:10 PM Alec Edworthy <A.Edworthy@lboro.ac.uk> wrote:
As someone said on a different thread, and it worked for me, check your ad/script blockers. I disabled mine for the site and the site came back to life for me.
A
-- Alec Edworthy A.Edworthy@lboro.ac.uk
participants (11)
-
Alec Edworthy
-
Ben Cox
-
Christopher Hawker
-
Hank Nussbacher
-
Ian Chilton
-
Josh Luthman
-
Rubens Kuhl
-
scott
-
Seth David Schoen
-
Tim Burke
-
Tom Beecher