Hi,

While I think #3 is important, it depends on your use of the end-block, and 
those entries can sometimes be cleaned up with some work. If the block is 
listed, that would certainly lower my buying price I am willing to pay for the 
block.  I did buy a block once in the ARIN region which showed up in IP 
geolocation databases as Russian (no idea why), but it took me quite a while to 
get it fixed.


Sincerely,
Jeffrey Hathaway
Information Technology * Howard Center Inc.


From: NANOG <nanog-boun...@nanog.org> On Behalf Of Torres, Matt via NANOG
Sent: Wednesday, April 3, 2019 11:20 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Purchasing IPv4 space - due diligence homework

All,
Side stepping a migration to IPv6 debate.... I'd like to hear advise from the 
group about performing due diligence research on an IPv4 block before 
purchasing it on the secondary market (on behalf of an end-user company). My 
research has branched into two questions: a) What 'checks' should I perform?, 
and b) what results from those checks should cause us to walk away?

My current list is:

  1.  Check BGP looking glass for route. It should not show up in the Internet 
routing table. If it does, walk away.
  2.  Check the ARIN registry. The longer history without recent transfers or 
changes is better. I don't know what explicit results should cause me to walk 
away here.
  3.  Check SORBS blacklisting. It should not show up except maybe the DUHL 
list(?). If it does, walk away.

Anything else? Advise?
Thanks,
Matt

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