In message 
<cafv686d+rhrtrevdm8sl9h+nu6tpi8x+jhbv2pl+w-m9gyb...@mail.gmail.com>, 
Jacob Slater <ja...@rezero.org> wrote:

>Route objects are not always required. While route objects are generally
>preferred and should be used, letters of authorization are still in use
>today. You certainly wouldn't see them in a public database (though you
>might see objects which claim to be tied to them). Even if you do, they may
>well be stale and no longer accurate.

Well, one could view such situations as being analogous to placing an
ad in the personals section of Craigslist which only says that one is
"into rough encounters".  If some Craigslist editor/moderator or some
third party comes along and asks you to explain exactly what you meant
by that, well then (a) explaning your meaning seems like a very tiny
burden to bear and also (b) it doesn't seem like an unfair or undue
burden, given that you could pretty easily have made your intentions
clear from the outset.  (And likewise, it is apparently pretty easy
for anyone to register a route object in the RIPE DB.)

>I agree that it may be presumptuous to guess at how much time will be
>wasted without any justification. That said, I have seen a significant
>number of recent reports on various mailing lists of accused hijackers.
>While some of them have been accurate, some of them definitively jump to
>premature conclusions.

In the process of explaining the problem, you may very well have put
forward its solution also.

Perhaps somebody... I won't suggest who... should set up a mailing list
to allow anybody and everybody to present and pre-discusss allegations
of hijacking, with an eye toward providing a gentle and helpful education
to those folks who may misjudge certain specific situations.

It's just an idea.  Probably worth what you paid for it.

My hope and belief is that reasonable persons of good will can and
will discuss allegations and seek the facts and clarity, eevn if
left to themselves to do so on a privately run mailing list.

Are any of the mailing lists you have referred to already appropriate
for such early discussions?  Are any of them already open to the
general public?


Regards,
rfg

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