There must be a reason why the web site chooses the WAF list to block out the 
victim? If so why not the victim to contact the website to request them to talk 
to the waf list provider to remove victim ip block?

 

Edy

 

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+email=edylie....@nanog.org> On Behalf Of Owen DeLong 
via NANOG
Sent: Wednesday, 21 February 2024 7:04 am
To: j...@joelesler.net
Cc: NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: AWS WAF list

 

Unfortunately, the victim doesn’t chose the WAF list, the web site that is 
causing the victim grief chooses the WAF list.

 

Owen

 





On Feb 20, 2024, at 14:15, j...@joelesler.net <mailto:j...@joelesler.net>  
wrote:

 

There are other WAF lists available on AWS besides their native one.  Ones that 
have support.





On Feb 20, 2024, at 16:18, George Herbert <george.herb...@gmail.com 
<mailto:george.herb...@gmail.com> > wrote:

 

This is terrible advice, but you might need another netblock for the eyeballs.  
Possibly a small one with enterprise NAT, but something outside the AWS list 
ranges...

 

 

-George

 

On Mon, Feb 19, 2024 at 7:35 PM Justin H. <justindh...@gmail.com 
<mailto:justindh...@gmail.com> > wrote:

That matches my experience with these types of problems in the past.  
Especially when the end-users don't have a process for white-listing.  
We actually got a response from one WAF user to "connect to another 
network to log in, then you should be able to use the site, because it's 
just the login page that's protected".

I am working with someone off-list, so I have hope this can be resolved 
without account gymnastics. :)

Justin H.

Owen DeLong wrote:
> The whole situation with these WAF as a service setups is a nightmare for the 
> affected (afflicted) parties.
>
> I saw this problem from both sides when I was at Akamai. It’s not great from 
> the service provider side, but it’s an absolute shit show for anyone on the 
> wrong side of a block. There’s no accountability or process for redress of 
> errors whatsoever. The impacted party isn’t a customer of the WAF publisher, 
> so they cant get any traction there. The WAF subscriber blindly applies the 
> WAF and it’s virtually impossible to track down anyone there who even knows 
> that they subscribe to such a thing, let alone get them to take useful action.
>
> Best of luck.  The only thing I saw that worked while I was at Akamai was a 
> few entities subscribed to the WAF service and then complained about getting 
> blocked from their own web sites. Since they were then Akamai WAF customers, 
> they could get Akamai to take action.
>
> Crazy.
>
> Owen
>
>
>> On Feb 16, 2024, at 09:19, Justin H. <justindh...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:justindh...@gmail.com> > wrote:
>>
>> Justin H. wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> We found out recently that we are on the HostingProviderIPList (found here 
>>> https://docs.aws.amazon.com/waf/latest/developerguide/aws-managed-rule-groups-ip-rep.html)
>>>  at AWS and it's affecting our customers' access to various websites.  We 
>>> are a datacenter, and a hosting provider, but we have plenty of enterprise 
>>> customers with eyeballs.
>>>
>>> We're finding it difficult to find a technical contact that we can reach 
>>> since we're not an AWS customer.  Does anyone have a contact or advice on a 
>>> solution?
>> Sadly we're not getting any traction from standard AWS support, and end 
>> users of the WAF list like Reddit and Eventbrite are refusing to whitelist 
>> anyone.  Does anyone have any AWS contacts that might be able to assist?  
>> Our enterprise customers are becoming more and more impacted.
>>
>> Justin H.




 

-- 

-george william herbert
george.herb...@gmail.com <mailto:george.herb...@gmail.com> 

 

 

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