Hello David,

There has been an increase in organization and point of contact recovery 
requests in the past six months. These recovery requests are increasingly 
targeted at organizations and/or points of contact that have not been 
maintained in ARIN’s database for up to ten years or more.

ARIN staff uses internal practices developed over the last several years to 
verify the legitimacy of these requests. Their processing is very similar to 
the chain of custody and verification work conducted for transfers. We are 
finding a larger than usual number of these requests either being denied by 
ARIN staff or abandoned by the individual who submitted them. An increasing 
number of these requests appear to be hijacking attempts of legacy IPv4 
registrations.

One thing that might help would be if organizations that have performed 
acquisitions over the years would be more proactive in updating their 
registrations at ARIN.  This reduces the number of resources that have outdated 
information and thus reduces the potential target area in the registry for 
hijacking attacks.

We will be reporting on this and other registration trends we are experiencing 
at the upcoming ARIN meeting that takes place in April.

Regards,

Richard Jimmerson
CIO & Acting Director of Registration Services
American Registry for Internet Numbers


From: <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> on behalf 
of David Huberman 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 at 12:03 PM
To: "[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [arin-ppml] Hijackings on the increase?


Hello,


I'm at the ARIN On the Road event in Austin, TX today.  Eddie Diego from the 
ARIN staff is giving an excellent talk on registration services. He has pointed 
out in his slides, however, that hijackings of address blocks in Whois is on 
the rise.


Can someone at ARIN please discuss this a little on PPML -- data, things we can 
do to minimize risk, etc.


Thanks,

David
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PPML
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