In message <0FBE48E1-5DA1-4D1B-B973-B3538AFD45B0@ripe.net>, at 14:41:37 on Wed, 11 Dec 2019, Daniel Karrenberg <dfk@ripe.net> writes
Also some of this may be based on goofy geolocation. My family server for instance suddenly seems to be regarded by some as somewhere in Russia even though it has not moved from Germany in years. This way I can practise my hardly existent Russian by trying to decipher the google ads. ;-)
This is becoming ever more likely as the cause (of the grief to the ISP's customers). Because I've now found anti-abuse sites which allege that the UK-based ISP who received this block of addresses in March 2019, is located in the somewhat distant country from which the addresses were transferred. Flush the cache, someone! There is no need to disclose (or receive) any personal information regarding the individuals involved in this chain of events, to identify potential corporations who need persuading to correct this erroneous statement of affairs. Mindful that one of the original Data Protection Principles was a commitment to an ethic of: "accurate and, where necessary, kept up to date". -- Roland Perry