Hi Piotr
On 07/05/2015 22:24, Piotr Strzyzewski
wrote:
On Thu, May 07, 2015 at 07:15:41PM +0200, denis wrote:
Dear Denis and DB-WG Members
Tools provided by the RIPE NCC to find the abuse contact for a
resource (RIPEstat, Abuse Finder) only search for "abuse-c:" data.
Just to clarify - I'm affraid that this looks like not being correct.
First of all, this topic was discussed at RIPE69 and it was declared by
RIPE NCC Staff Member that RIPEstat is still using more sophisticated
way to look for abuse contact. Moreover, at the RIPEstat Abuse Contact
Finder webpage (https://stat.ripe.net/specials/abuse) there is still
present link to RIPE Labs article describing how this tool works
(https://labs.ripe.net/Members/cteusche/finding-anti-abuse-contact-information-with-ripestat).
You are right, RIPEstat still uses an algorithm looking for
email addresses that may not be correct, whereas the database
Abuse Finder tool only uses the official abuse contact
mechanism. I would disagree that this is 'more sophisticated'.
It is a crude attempt to rate historical contact information
that simply does not fit into a sliding scale of reliability.
This algorithm has been criticised by members in the past who
have received abuse reports to wrong email addresses or relating
to resources they are not responsible for, simply because a
complex web of references has changed over time. The problem is
when someone uses a tool that has been provided to return an
abuse contact and it gives you an email address, people will use
that address. It does not matter how many stars it has, they
will use it. Given a choice between a 1 star address or
nothing...it is not a choice to the user.
All above are of course just kind of hints. However, one can check this
in practice, looking for Abuse Contact for 155.202.0.0/16 (being just an
example here). Both whois client and Abuse Finder says that there is no
abuse contact registered for 155.202.0.0/16, whereas RIPEstat reports
abuse@produban.com with 4/5 quality rating as an Abuse Contact.
This looks like those tools are based on different alghoritms and
RIPEstat doesn't _only_ search for "abuse-c" data.
But now you have a dilemma. This example you
referred to is a top level legacy object. They are not subject
to the policy and do not have to set up "abuse-c:". In this
example there is no referenced ORGANISATION object, no
"abuse-c:", just a historical "abuse-mailbox:" in a referenced
ROLE object. So it does not follow the accepted "abuse-c:"
mechanism. As long as they are allowed to continue to do this
they may never change anything and never set up an "abuse-c:"
correctly.
If you decide not to do a cleanup because legacy space is not
set up with "abuse-c:" and RIPEstat still tries to track vague
references, then legacy space holders will not change anything
and you will never be able to do a cleanup. It is a vicious
circle. That means one of the main aims of the "abuse-c:" has
failed - to have one single place to record abuse contact
details and one single way of finding and reporting it. Apart
from the few missing "abuse-c:" that Tim referred to, it is ONLY
legacy space that does not have "abuse-c:" now.
A cleanup was proposed in the impact analysis for ripe-563
https://www.ripe.net/participate/policies/proposals/2011-06
" In order to clean up existing data, the RIPE NCC will notify the
users and convert "abuse-mailbox:" attributes into "remarks:" in any
object other than role objects."
As it is now a few years since this was discussed and agreed I think
it wise to propose the cleanup again and reaffirm this is the way to
go.
I therefore propose the RIPE NCC converts all "abuse-mailbox:"
attributes into "remarks:" attributes in PERSON, MNTNER, ORGANISATION
and IRT objects. Then deprecates this attribute from these object
types.
Although I like this idea, I would prefer that RIPE NCC first address
the problem of missing abuse-c attributes.
For the missing "abuse-c:" in RIPE
allocated/assigned address space, this should be a simple
process to fix. Notify the holders to remind them of their
responsibilities, allow them a short period to set it up, then
enforce it where necessary. This should not be a blocker on a
cleanup.
I further propose that any "abuse-mailbox:" attribute in a ROLE
object, where the ROLE object is not referenced by any "abuse-c:"
attribute, and has not been referenced for at least 90 days, is also
converted into "remarks:". This will help to clean up historical
"abuse-mailbox:" attributes that existed in ROLE objects before
"abuse-c:" was introduced.
Is this going to be one-time action or periodic, scheduled procedure?
It could be a one off to delete the historical data, or it could be
built into the automated cleanup process to clean out redundant
abuse contacts that are not referenced anywhere.
I suggest you go ahead with the cleanup despite
all the above. The information currently in objects is not lost,
but changed into "remarks: abuse-mailbox:". So if RIPEstat still
wants to search for and report this information it is still
there. But it makes a clear statement that the database only
supports one method of recording abuse contact details.
cheers
Denis Walker
Independent Netizen
Best regards,
Piotr