On Apr 4, 2016, at 8:17 PM, Jon Lewis 
<jle...@lewis.org<mailto:jle...@lewis.org>> wrote:

If ARIN has a large pool of ASNs which it believes ARIN is responsible for, and 
are not being paid for, i.e. ASN squatters, then WTH are these ASN's not 
published in whois as Unused/Reserved/Reclaimed/whatever term/language ARIN 
comes up with that clearly identifies the ASN as not belonging to whoever might 
be trying to use it?  That just might help deter transit providers from 
allowing customers to use them.  An automated periodic email to peeringdb/whois 
contacts for the immediate upstream ASNs would at least notify/remind networks 
that they're providing transit to an org squatting on an ASN.

Jon -

   ARIN could undertake automation to monitor the appearance of ASN’s
   (or address blocks, for that matter) in the global routing tables and then
   send (unrequested) email to the contacts for the appropriate network.

   (I will note that much of this information is already being monitored,
   and reported on, at http://www.cidr-report.org , but those ISPs who
   really care about such and would act on the results are precisely the
   ones who least likely to be the problem…)

   If you wish us to proceed as suggested, please writeup a brief suggestion
   at <https://www.arin.net/participate/acsp/acsp.html> and we will review it
   and post for discussion on aria-consult (as it is quite distinct from the 
current
   thread here on PPML regarding whether any policy change for 2-Byte ASN’s
   is desirable.)

Thanks!
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
ARIN

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