In message <
20191210114312.GJ72330@Space.Net>, at 12:43:12 on Tue, 10
Dec 2019, Gert Doering <
gert@space.net> writes
>Hi,
>
>On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 05:47:26PM +0000, Roland Perry wrote:
>> My question is this: how can the organisations responsible for that
>> former life be identified (in general terms) so that the end users can
>> at least given a plausible explanation for why their connectivity has
>> been so badly affected.
>>
>> As far as I know, all the new ISP is prepared to divulge is "we are
>> working on it", and all the users' IT departments are prepared to
>> divulge is "Our new ISP says he's working on it".
>
>If this is ISP-managed space ("provider aggregateable", PA, in RIPE lingo)
>this is a matter between the end customer and their ISP.
>
>If(!) the ISP has been well-behaving RIPE member and documenting their
>assignments in the RIPE DB, the historic snapshots of the inetnum
>records will shed light.
How do I as (nowadays anyway, an outsider) access such historic
snapshots of the IP address range, before today's ISP acquired them.
Is this a 'service' that RIPE NCC offers (and hence my question in this
forum).
Sometimes the answer is "we aren't allowed to tell you - because of data
protection". But I suspect the dirt was acquired by a user outside the
EU, and hence arguably outside the protection of EU DP law.
>But I see this as somewhat unlikely, as it
>seems the ISP is unwilling to fix up the mess they created for their
>new customer.
>
>I'd just send laywers their way - "you gave us these addresses, they
>are close to unusable, go fix things or give us clean ones, or we'll
>change ISPs again and you pay for all costs incurred"...
If I were the admins in this case, I would have (weeks ago) demanded
"some new clean ones", seeing as how the process of cleaning the current
ones is proving less than adequate.
But unfortunately the customer organisation is part of a consortium, and
you'd need to get a lot of *other* members on side.
Being able to say who attracted the dirt, is my motivation for assisting
in an attempt to get a critical mass of consortium members to act.
--
Roland Perry