About #3... I had a little discussion on abuse-wg@RIPE a while ago about 
keeping records up to date and relevant. See below. 

Nobody at RIPE cares much at the moment (to actually pick up this subject). 
Maybe they need a push with a TerexRH400.


David Hofstee

Deliverability Management
MailPlus B.V. Netherlands (ESP)
---------------------------------------------------------ctrl-v--------------------------------------------
Hi Frederik,

Who has an interest in a clean database? The sloppy Org or Ripe? The answer is 
Ripe, therefore it should also spend energy [via Ripe Ncc] in (making sure that 
Orgs are) keeping it clean.

Kids do not grow up themselves, it requires an active process. Organisations 
are not much different.

David


-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: Fredrik Widell [mailto:fred...@resilans.se] 
Verzonden: vrijdag 15 maart 2013 10:37
Aan: MailPlus| David Hofstee
CC: anti-abuse...@ripe.net
Onderwerp: RE: [anti-abuse-wg] Abuse Reporting Issues

On Fri, 15 Mar 2013, MailPlus| David Hofstee wrote:

Well, that is probably more a sign of a sloppy organisation, it is up to the 
LIR to keep the ripedb up to date, this is not the role of RIPE. You probably 
dont expect RIPE to keep track of your old DNS-entrys and give you a phone-call 
if it seems that a customer-name is wrong do you?



> Hi Frederik,
>
> I am such a person (DH3195-RIPE). I entered my email a long time ago. Unlike 
> passwords that expire and accounts that get locked when not used, this vital 
> contact info is never re-validated. We never get mail that says: "Ripe wants 
> to confirm that you are still having Role X in your organisation. Click here 
> to confirm.". A full-inbox bounce could trigger a phone call. Etc.  Ripe 
> should charge money for not keeping records up to date.
>
> In my (ESP) world, an email address that has not been used by the list-owner 
> for over a year is a risk for a spam trap ;-).
>
> Bye,
>
> David
---------------------------------------------------------ctrl-v--------------------------------------------

-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] Namens Andrei Robachevsky
Verzonden: Wednesday, July 2, 2014 4:24 PM
Aan: NANOG
Onderwerp: Feedback Requested: Routing Resilience Manifesto

Colleagues,

A small group of network operators has been working on defining a minimal, but 
feasible package of recommended measures that, if deployed on a wide scale, 
could result in visible improvements to the security and resilience of the 
global routing system.

Many operators are ahead of the curve and already implement much more than the 
proposed recommendations. But we believe that gathering support for these 
relatively small steps could pave the road to more significant actions on a 
global scale.

We called this set of recommendations a Routing Resilience Manifesto - you can 
find a draft document here: https://www.routingmanifesto.org/.

This initial version of the Manifesto was drafted by a small group, but we need 
a wider community review, your feedback, and, ultimately, your support to make 
this initiative fly. It was already presented at several venues, like RIPE and 
NANOG, and now we open it for a more detailed review. Please note that this is 
very much a work in progress.

Please review the document and provide your feedback and text suggestions 
online or via routingmanife...@isoc.org by 31 August 2014.

Regards,

Andrei Robachevsky
Internet Society

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