Re: de-peering for security sake

2016-01-02 Thread Richard Hesse
Purposefully hosting an "inflammatory" site that the Russians or Chinese
object to is a valid way to get your AS null routed inside those countries.
Same goes for Turkey, India, Australia...

Solves the DDoS and malware problem inside their borders, not yours.
On Dec 25, 2015 4:43 AM, "Max Tulyev"  wrote:

> Come on, keep calm and wait a year: Russia and China will de-peer with
> all the world for their security (AKA censorship) reasons! ;)
>
> On 25.12.15 01:44, Colin Johnston wrote:
> > see
> > http://map.norsecorp.com
> >
> > We really need to ask if China and Russia for that matter will not take
> abuse reports seriously why allow them to network to the internet ?
> >
> > Colin
> >
> >
>
>


Level 3 contact

2016-01-02 Thread Andrew Dampf
Would an engineer from Level 3 please contact me off list? Thank you.


Another Big day for IPv6 - 10% native penetration

2016-01-02 Thread Tomas Podermanski
Hi,

according to Google's statistics
(https://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html) on 31st December
2015 the IPv6 penetration reached 10% for the very first time. Just a
little reminder. On 20th Nov 2012 the number was 1%. In December we also
celebrated the 20th anniversary of IPv6 standardization - RFC 1883.

I'm wondering when we reach another significant milestone - 50% :-)

Tomas


 Original Message 
Subject:Big day for IPv6 - 1% native penetration
Date:   Tue, 20 Nov 2012 10:14:18 +0100
From:   Tomas Podermanski 
To: nanog@nanog.org



Hi,

It seems that today is a "big day" for IPv6. It is the very first
time when native IPv6 on google statistics
(http://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html) reached 1%. Some
might say it is tremendous success after 16 years of deploying IPv6 :-)

T.





Re: de-peering for security sake

2016-01-02 Thread Randy Bush
> Purposefully hosting an "inflammatory" site that the Russians or
> Chinese object to is a valid way to get your AS null routed inside
> those countries.  Same goes for Turkey, India, Australia...

luckily this is not true in the US.  oh wait.

>> We really need to ask if China and Russia for that matter will not
>> take abuse reports seriously why allow them to network to the
>> internet ?

luckily all american and ukranian isps respond to abuse in minutes.

moving right along ...

randy