It appears that, by and large, the route objects currently present within
the ripe-nonauth.db.gz file refer either to bogons (which I've already
provided a list of) or else they refer to out-of-region IP address blocks.

The latter group seems at least explainable.  The former group I am hoping
will disappear from the data base soon.

Checking now however I find there are a very small number of anomalous
route objects within the latest edition of the ripe-nonauth.db.gz file,
i.e. ones that refer to in-region IP blocks:

192.124.252.0/22
192.70.0.0/17
192.76.32.0/21
192.108.160.0/20

I'm not sure how these should be made to go away, but I wish they would.
They offend my personal sense of fastidiousness, and I don't like
unexplainable mysteries.

Note that the RIPE-NONAUTH route object 192.76.32.0/21 appears to have
some counterpart route objects for sub-blocks of that /21 and these
sub-blocks route objects are *not* marked as RIPE-NONAUTH, suggesting
that there is no compelling reason for the 192.76.32.0/21 route
object to be marked as RIPE-NONAUTH.

The same sort of syndrome appears to apply also in the case of the
192.124.252.0/22 RIPE-NONAUTH route object, i.e. in this case also
there appear to be valid non-RIPE-NONAUTH route objects in the data
base for sub-blocks of 192.124.252.0/22, which begs the question:
Why is the 192.124.252.0/22 markes as RIPE-NONAUTH?


Regards,
rfg

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